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Folk interested in my paean to classic small town horror novels, FEARFUL FESTIVITIES, will have an additional treat in store for them: this stunning cover by the inimitable Steve Upham. I'm delighted.
THIRTEEN DAYS BY SUNSET BEACH by Ramsey Campbell – a review by Gary Fry For a long time I’ve felt that a collection of Ramsey Campbell’s short fiction set in countries other than in the UK would make a great book. Remember such tales as ‘The Same in any Language’, ‘All for Sale’, and (more tangentially, perhaps) ‘Seeing the World’? I personally loved every one, and I strongly believe that stories taking place amid alternative cultures and geographical landscapes offer horror an additional layer of unease, of potential alienation. And so it seems unusual that – with the exception of a few chapters in the likes of The Claw and The Count of Eleven , along with a significant chunk of Pact of the Fathers – none of Campbell’s novels has been set wholly abroad. Until now, of course. All the events of his latest, Thirteen Days by Sunset Beach , take place on a fictional Greek island. The plot is relatively straightforward. Focusing exclusively on the perceptions of an older...
The Incubations by Ramsey Campbell Review by Gary Fry In a relatively recent review, I suggested that, just as "the wrong man" had become a central, recurring theme in the work of Hitchcock, the "misunderstood doomsayer" has similarly come to preoccupy Ramsey Campbell's later novels. By this I mean that there's usually a character who perceives a truth that others are un willing to accept, resulting in much frustration and , ultimately, enforced isolation on the part of he (and it usually is a he ) who cries wolf. But now, in his latest work, Campbell appears to be pushing that sense of social exclusion even further. Without giving too much away, the central character of his previous novel, The Lonely Lands , is forced to avoid integration with others in fear of contaminating them with a mysterious ailment that has befallen him. And i ndeed, some thing of the same stripe seems to be occurring in this, his new book, a...
2013 was good to me in that I achieved a number of things I've been working towards for over a decade. Firstly, I got solid book deal with a publisher with a nice slice of the horror market: DarkFuse over in the States. My first novel with DF ( Conjure House ) has, for me, shifted an unprecedented number of copies and continues to sell strongly six months after publication. Additionally, the novellas Emergence and Lurker still draw positive attention. Long may this continue, what with a new DF novel due next Easter ( Severed ), a bunch of new novellas ( Menace in January, Savage in June, and Mutator later), and an ebook reprint of my limited edition PS Publishing novel The House of Canted Steps (due February). The second great 2013 thing was getting a deluxe-edition collection out from PS Publishing, the home of horror masters Ramsey Campbell and many other fine folk. Shades of Nothingness looks gorgeous and I'm happy with the range of fiction in there, which represents...
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