Shivers VII by Richard Chizmar


Shivers VII
Title : Shivers VII
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1587672251
ISBN-10 : 9781587672255
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 410
Publication : First published May 1, 2013

Shivers VII contains more than 100,000 words of chilling fiction from more than two dozen of today's most popular authors of horror and suspense including Stephen King, Clive Barker, Graham Masterton, Ed Gorman, Bill Pronzini, Lisa Tuttle, Kaaron Warren, Del James, Lisa Morton, Roberta Lannes, Scott Nicholson, Bev Vincent, Brian James Freeman, Norman Prentiss, and many others.

Of special note to collectors: "Weeds" by Stephen King was originally published in Cavalier magazine in May 1976 and in Nugget magazine in April 1979, but has not been reprinted since, although it was adapted as "The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill" for Creepshow in 1982. "The Departed" by Clive Barker was originally published as "Hermione and the Moon" in The New York Times on October 30, 1992.

Featuring original dark fiction with a handful of rare reprints, Shivers VII is available only from Cemetery Dance Publications.

Table of Contents:
"The Departed" by Clive Barker
"Red Rover, Red Rover" by Norman Partridge
"Breakbone" by Bill Pronzini
"The Storybook Forest" by Norman Prentiss
"Simple" by Al Sarrantonio
"Born Dead" by Lisa Tuttle
"The Baby Store" by Ed Gorman
"A Lonely Town in Alaska" by Darren Speegle
"Zombie Dreams" by Tim Waggoner
"Echoes" by Don D'Ammassa
"Bone by Bone" by Scott Nicholson
"Sleeping with the Bower Birds" by Kaaron Warren
"Memory Lake" by Robert Morrish
"That Long Black Train" by Travis Heermann
"Beholder" by Graham Masterton
"Feel The Noise" by Lisa Morton
"Plant Life" by Greg F. Gifune
"I Am Become Poe" by Kevin Quigley
"Arbeit Macht Frei" by Del James
"Bovine" by Joel Arnold
"Depth" by Rio Youers
"GPS" by Rick Hautala
"Room 8" by Roberta Lannes
"Severance Package" by Bev Vincent
"As She Lay There Dying" by Brian James Freeman
"Weeds" by Stephen King


Shivers VII Reviews


  • Karl

    Table of Contents:

    9 - "The Departed" by Clive Barker
    17 - "Red Rover, Red Rover" by Norman Partridge
    37 - "Breakbone" by Bill Pronzini
    49 - "The Storybook Forest" by Norman Prentiss
    61 - "Simple" by Al Sarrantonio
    69 - "Born Dead" by Lisa Tuttle
    70 - "The Baby Store" by Ed Gorman
    93 - "A Lonely Town in Alaska" by Darren Speegle
    113 - "Zombie Dreams" by Tim Waggoner
    131 -"Echoes" by Don D'Ammassa
    145 - "Bone by Bone" by Scott Nicholson
    157 - "Sleeping with the Bower Birds" by Kaaron Warren
    170 - "Memory Lake" by Robert Morrish
    209 - "That Long Black Train" by Travis Heermann
    235 - "Beholder" by Graham Masterton
    257 - "Feel The Noise" by Lisa Morton
    265 - "Plant Life" by Greg F. Gifune
    283 - "I Am Become Poe" by Kevin Quigley
    293 - "Arbeit Macht Frei" by Del James
    305 - "Bovine" by Joel Arnold
    317 - "Depth" by Rio Youers
    345 - "GPS" by Rick Hautala
    361 - "Room 8" by Roberta Lannes
    371 - "Severance Package" by Bev Vincent
    383 - "As She Lay There Dying" by Brian James Freeman
    397 - "Weeds" by Stephen King

    This copy is signed by Richard Chizmar and is one of 750 copies.

  • Patrickmalka

    The Shivers anthologies, volumes 5 and 6, were important to me because they presented a wide range of horror stories across several generations of writers and horror sub genres, all from an important indie horror publisher. Some of the writers I follow religiously are ones I found in these anthologies.

    Shivers 7 is similar in scope but with a bigger page count. The stories in it are uneven at best. Especially from the veteran authors. It's a funny thing when you can tell that you are reading a writer's five hundredth short story. Perfectly told and overall, not all that interesting. That's how I felt about a lot of the stories in this anthology unfortunately. The few I really enjoyed made the whole thing worth reading and to be fair, those I really disliked leaned hard on tropes I don't enjoy much to begin with. They tended to be mean which is fine, but mean without believable motive, and that's where I check out. Also didn't help that the table of contents this time around lacked diversity (in more ways than one). Really hard to ignore.

  • Kevin Lucia

    Highly recommend picking this up. Definitely a great read, packed with some fantastic stories.

  • Scott

    Most of the stories here are decent but the only ones that really excelled were by Graham Masterton and Kaaron Warren. Overall, an average collection.

  • Greg Chapman

    An awesome collection of some of the world's best horror writers.

  • Noelle

    I love reading anthologies that have stories that grip me so hard I have to put it down for a few minutes just to digest what I have read. I truly enjoyed almost every story in this. “The Carbon Dreamer” by Jack Dann wasn’t really my sort of tale, but all of the others were great.

  • Carrie

    Brilliant collection of stories. The only one I could say I didn't like was "Beholder" but that's because I have serious eye squick!

  • Jenni Hurd

    I love scary stories by great writers. This is a great scary book!

  • Julie Washington

    Good collection of stories.

  • Eric Bauman

    As with all anthologies, this one is a nixed bag: some great stories, lots of okay ones and a few that I just didn't get. For me, most of the stories were okay, one or two were head-scratchers. Here are the three that I found really effective.

    + "Weeds" by Stephen King. If you've seen "Creepshow," then you know the basic plot. Unlike the movie, which played it for laughs, this story (originally published at least five years before the movie) plays it straight--and creepy.

    + "Beholder" by Graham Masterson. It wouldn't be fair for me to give away anything about this story. The journey is exquisitely built and I was cringing the whole time I read.

    + "Arbeit Macht Frei" by Del James. As this "boys visits Auschwitz with his parents" story unfolded, I was expecting a denouement where boy becomes Nazi. It went a different, more satisfying way, I'm happy to say.

    Not a bad anthology overall.

  • Bill Borre

    “Depth” by Rio Youers - James buys a painting with four blood stains on it and eventually realizes that it is a confession and map to the grave of three people the artist had murdered. After digging up the victim's remains and placing the painting in the hole James plans to murder his brother and ex-wife and create his own painting.

    "Bovine" by Joel Arnold - wc
    "Plant Life" by Greg F. Gifune - wc
    "The Baby Store" by Ed Gorman - wc
    "That Long Black Train" by Travis Heermann - wc
    "Arbeit Macht Frei" by Del James - wc
    "Breakbone" by Bill Pronzini - wc
    "I Am Becoming Poe" by Kevin Quigley - wc
    "Born Dead" by Lisa Tuttle - wc

  • Emily

    All these stories are excellent examples of horror fiction but five of these will stick with you long after you finish the book. There is the growing terror of Red Rover, the revulsion and visceral horror of Break Bone, the sense of utter hopelessness of Beholder, the shocking ending of GPS and the first appearance in any anthology of the Stephen King epic Weeds which is the basis of the Lonesome Death of Jordy Verril which the King himself played so perfectly in the movie Creepshow. This is a great addition for any horror collection and a must have for any Stephen King collector's library.

  • Jeff Pfeiffer

    I liked most of the stories, but I'd have to say that Memory River, and Arbeit Macht Frei are stand outs in this book. It's a lovely collection of horror short stories by some less known authors and a few well known ones such as Steven King and Clive Barker. It's definitely worth a read at night beside the fire place, or if you're out somewhere camping in the wilderness.

  • Leah Polcar

    This is a nice little collection. However, no story really stuck out or stayed with me, but nothing was really horrible either. I am a fan of Chizmar and he collected some very good authors here. If you are a fan of horror short stories, you could do worse.

  • Donald

    There are a ton of great stories from a ton of great authors.