Book #28 of 2024: Red Rabbit by Alex Grecian The Weird Western vibes of this adventure novel are delightful, presenting a version of the post-Civil War midwest that’s populated with demons, ghouls, and similar entities, all treated matter-of-factly as threats that an unwary traveler might encounter like any other. I’m less sold on the plot, …
Tag Archives: weird fiction
Book Review: Fable of the Swan by Jenna Katerin Moran
Book #192 of 2021: Fable of the Swan by Jenna Katerin Moran This is without a doubt one of the strangest books I’ve ever encountered. It’s weird fiction in every sense of the term, the sort of story that has to teach you how to interpret its slipstream oddities as you go along, and even …
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Book Review: Unquenchable Fire by Rachel Pollack
Book #20 of 2020: Unquenchable Fire by Rachel Pollack This is a supremely odd book, and I’m honestly not sure whether I like it or not. The incomplete and elliptical reveals to its slipstream worldbuilding offer ambiguities that feel worth lingering over, but they also keep the reader at a certain distance from fully engaging …
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Movie Review: Black Mirror: Bandersnatch (2018)
Movie #22 of 2018: Black Mirror: Bandersnatch (2018) This metafictional choose-your-own-adventure streaming special about a programmer’s breakdown while creating a choose-your-own-adventure game is an odd property to review. Is it a movie? A TV episode? A video game itself? I’ve chosen to treat it as the first option, since that’s what the crowd-sourced wisdom of …
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Book Review: It Devours! by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor
Book #218 of 2018: It Devours! by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor (Welcome to Night Vale #2) Even more so than the first Welcome to Night Vale novel, I can’t imagine this book appealing much to any readers who are not already fans of the original podcast. The plot is brand-new, but it relies heavily …
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Book Review: Doctor Who: Lungbarrow by Marc Platt
Book #202 of 2018: Doctor Who: Lungbarrow by Marc Platt (Virgin New Adventures #60) This is a fascinatingly weird book, the culmination of a series of adventures that the Seventh Doctor continued to have after the classic run of Doctor Who was canceled as a television program in 1989. When that version of the Time …
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Book Review: The Dark Tower by Stephen King
Book #157 of 2018: The Dark Tower by Stephen King (The Dark Tower #7) In 1999, Stephen King was struck by a van and nearly killed, directly inspiring the author to resume and finish the Dark Tower series he had been working on intermittently since 1970. King would ultimately write these last three novels in …
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Book Review: Song of Susannah by Stephen King
Book #146 of 2018: Song of Susannah by Stephen King (The Dark Tower #6) The Dark Tower series really requires readers to get on its wavelength of mystical intuition and fated coincidence, which is usually not a problem for me when there’s enough weird science magic and post-apocalyptic western worldbuilding on display. This sixth book, …
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Book Review: Wolves of the Calla by Stephen King
Book #102 of 2018: Wolves of the Calla by Stephen King (The Dark Tower #5) The flashback-centric Wizard and Glass is my favorite novel in Stephen King’s epic Dark Tower sequence, but I’m willing to entertain arguments that this next book is its best. The setting has been firmly established at this point, and King …
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Book Review: Authority by Jeff VanderMeer
Book #89 of 2018: Authority by Jeff VanderMeer (Southern Reach #2) I liked but didn’t love Jeff VanderMeer’s novel Annihilation, and I was hopeful that this sequel, set outside the mysterious Area X that clouds everyone’s thinking, would offer a more straightforward story. Unfortunately, it does not. Instead there’s the same creeping horror and hypnosis-fueled …
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