Title | : | Night Terrors Vol. 6 |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | - |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Kindle Edition |
Number of Pages | : | 209 |
Publication | : | First published October 30, 2020 |
Night Terrors Vol. 6 Reviews
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Another One For My Collection…
With some new authors that I have been introduced to, I am very happy with this series.
Lots of great stories in this book, and each book is only .99 cents. What a bargain for thirteen tales of horror.
Demons, trolls, ghosts and other monsters, I’m extremely pleased with the stories that I have read. You will be too.
Go ‘head and try them… -
Again a good collection with some nice new impulses, but it didn't wow me as much as some previous issues.
What keeps on annoying me is that there was again just one female authors... but at least more female protagonists (and thus stories read by Stephanie Shade).
Stories that I liked:
Leftovers by Warren Benedetto - good vampire(ish) tale focused on a little old lady.
Waters Take Me by Jim Horlock - wasn't really a horror tale but I liked it nonetheless. Young women do their best not to fall in love in a 19th century village.
Collection Day by John Wayne Comunale - I like a good mafia tale and interspersed with creepy demon worshippers I like them even more!
Mother Love by Jon McGoran - a young pregnant woman pleads for shelter during a cold hard winter night. I loved the plot-twist!
Issue 32 by Daniel Comnenus - a man tries to collect all issues of a horror comic, but should he really? Even though you know were this is going, I really liked the build up.
Honorary Mention:
Walled In by Carl Hughes - part of it takes place in Berlin and focuses on the Berlin Wall! I wish this would have taken a different direction but there aren't many horror stories based in Germany around, so I'll take what I can get! -
From stomach-churning fright to hair-raising terror and the heartwarming delight of Ron Ripley's adorable Series character young Jimmy Hsu, high-functioning autistic with eidectic memory, here are 13 eclectic tales of terror.
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Here is a collection of stories in which the things that go bump into the night swiftly mutate into things that go screaming into the light. Seemingly innocent looking people become things far from innocent. These stories spoke to me as analogies of the monsters that dwell within all of us. Bottom line - I loved them all. There are no slackers here. Scare Street remains as a source of some of the best horror today.
This anthology closes as all of them have so far - with Ron Ripley's hauntingly excellent Jimmy Hsu. This time Jimmy meets a beast that by all rights should rip him apart but takes a liking to him. Just one example of the quality writing found here.