My feelings on this year’s “Mammoth” entry might be a matter
of taste over substance. The
stories are rich and well-written, but there was a lingering feel of dust on
the pages—not befitting to the proclamation of “new” on the cover.
You can’t go wrong with “Throttle,” a collaboration by Joe
Hill and Stephen King, based on the story “Duel,” by Richard Matheson. That’s a hefty trifecta, and some
excellent reading. The biker gang
twist was clever, and the deft attention paid to characters and their motivations
adds dimension to the twisted trucker looking to wreak havoc in his growling
semi.
“Venturi” and “What Happens When You Wake Up in the Night,”
by Richard Christian Matheson and Michael Marshall Smith, respectively, were
the other two highlights for me.
“Venturi” is a slick exercise in paranoia, intimately told with such
fervor that the book almost heats up in your hands. “Night” is primal fear seen through the simple narrative of
a young girl, and the focus is on the fear, not the rational reasons for what
she is experiencing, racking up some serious points on the “I’ll remember this
one for a while” horror Richter scale.
Stephen Volk’s “After the Ape” crossed me up. Beautiful and almost lyrical, it tells
the story of Ann Darrow dealing with the death of her “lover,” King Kong. Yet I asked myself why this was in a
horror anthology. The story can
best be described as having “emotional dread,” as she follows her grief to the
interminable end, and its inclusion made me consider the blurring boundaries of
genre. If someone opens up yet
another discussion on the differences between “literary” and “horror” fiction,
I might be compelled to use this as evidence that there’s plenty room for both
on a piece of paper.
For the rest of the stories as a whole, whether it’s through
settings (1920’s Cairo, old hotels, derelict amusement parks) or language
(big-voice / third-person narration and word choice), it felt like a very
antique collection. “The Reunion”
would be at home next to a Poe story, and “The Game of Bear” is an M. R. James
story finished up by Reggie Oliver.
Good stories? Yes. But if I told you some of these stories
were fifty or a hundred years old, you would believe me. Not an excellent barometer for what’s
new and exciting in horror fiction.
The antho is worth your money. You get the excellent “Year in Horror” and “Necrology”
sections, as well as some handy addresses and resources for the aspiring writer
or ardent horror fan. You get
about 300 pages of solid horror stories, not a dud in the bunch. You may very well like it, as I did,
but what kept me from loving it was how the tales seemed like fresh pieces of
wood, beaten with chains to look older than they really were. I was ready for something new and
exciting, and instead I got tried and true.
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Mammoth Book of New Horror
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