Inferno: New Tales of Terror and the Supernatural
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Average customer review:Product Description
Mission accomplished. Datlow has produced a collection filled with some of the most powerful voices in the field: Pat Cadigan, Terry Dowling, Jeffrey Ford, Christopher Fowler, Glen Hirshberg, K. W. Jeter, Joyce Carol Oates, and Lucius Shepard, to name a few. Each author approaches fear in a different way, but all of the stories’ characters toil within their own hell. An aptly titled anthology, Inferno will scare the pants off readers and further secure Ellen Datlow’s standing as a preeminent editor of modern horror.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #167686 in Books
- Published on: 2007-12-10
- Released on: 2007-12-10
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 384 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780765315588
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Datlow (The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror) makes a solid claim to being the premiere horror editor of her generation with this state-of-the-art anthology of 20 new stories by some of horror fiction's best and brightest. Several outstanding selections feature imperiled children and explore the horrific potential of childhood fears, among them Glen Hirshberg's The Janus Tree, which gives a creepy supernatural spin to a poignant memoir of adolescent angst and alienation, and Stephen Gallagher's Misadventure, in which a young man's near-death experience as a child endows him as an adult with consoling insight into the afterlife. The compilation's variety of approaches and moods is exemplary, ranging from the natural supernaturalism of Laird Barron's cosmic horror tale The Forest, to the unsettling psychological horror of Lucius Shepard's The Ease with Which We Freed the Beast; the metaphysical terrors of Conrad Williams's Perhaps the Last; and the slapstick grotesquerie of K.W. Jeter's black comedy Riding Bitch. If this book can be taken as a gauge of the vitality of imagination in contemporary horror fiction, then the genre is very healthy indeed. (Dec.)
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Review
“One good ghost story, one truly effective tale, is usually sufficient to scare the bejesus out of a person. The Dark contains sixteen tales, enough to keep fans tossing and turning and peeking under the bed for a fortnight and then some. Watch your hackles when you read this book; Ms. Datlow and her horrormongers are out to raise them.” --Dallas Morning News
“Sure to provide a yardstick by which future ghost fiction will be measured.” --Publishers Weekly (starred review) on The Dark
About the Author
Customer Reviews
An excellent assortment of dark tales guaranteed to make the reader shudder
I recently finished reading INFERNO, edited by Ellen Datlow, and must remark that this 2007 original horror anthology is one of the best to come down the pike in a long time. Comprising an assortment of dark themes, INFERNO offers readers an outstanding variety of twenty tales ranging from psychological and ghostly to monstrous and downright weird, if whimsical, the latter in reference to Jeffrey Ford's "The Bedroom Light," a conundrum of creepy and whimsical that left me chuckling while goose flesh crept up and down my arms. Clever.
The following is a list of my favorite stories, in order of the toc:
"The Forest" by Laird Barron: old acquaintances are revisited while the Old Ones feed.
"The Monsters of Heaven" by Nathan Ballingrud: a disturbing tale of loss, grief, and sacrifice. (This one was hard for me to shake off, haunted me for days.)
""Lives" by John Grant: the-cat-with-nine-lives meets a nasty demise, with uncomfortable implications.
"Ghorla" by Mark Samuels: repulsive retribution for the careless.
"An Apiary of White Bees" by Lee Thomas: oh, just let me say that the visceral-rating is high in this tale of bizarre horror.
"Stilled Life" by Pat Cadigan: a disturbing riff on the Pygmalion theme in reverse.
Finishing out this excellent anthology are "Riding Bitch" by K. W. Jeter--a tale of ghostly disaffection in Las Vegas; "Misadventure" by Stephen Gallagher--an engrossing tale of "haunts"; "Inelastic Collisions" by Elizabeth Bear--beware of the singles-bar in this one; "The Uninvited" by Christopher Fowler--a tale of unsavory reminiscence that made my spine creep with recollection; "13 O'Clock" by Mike O'Driscoll--a tragic and inescapable haunting; "Face" by Joyce Carol Oates--an ambiguous curse with psychological underpinnings; "The Keeper" by P. D. Cacek--a disturbing reminder that we must never forget; "Bethany's Wood" by Paul Finch--a tale about the very last person on earth who should go mad; "The Ease with Which We Freed the Beast" by Lucius Shepard--fantastic and gruesome delusions therein, this tale is a "must read" for the horror story die-hard; "Hushabye" by Simon Bestwick--on the track of someone or something feeding on innocence; "Perhaps the Last" by Conrad Williams--while a killer stalks the city, a mall guard obsesses about an unavailable woman; "The Janus Tree" by Glen Hirshberg--a disturbing coming-of-age tale set against the backdrop of a decaying Montana mining town; "The Bedroom Light" by Jeffrey Ford--ghosts and a strange birthing that for some reason had me thinking of the cult film classic "Eraserhead" (I shiver); and last but not least, "The Suits at Auderlene" by Terry Dowling--a tale about arcane armor and generational revenge.
Ellen Datlow dedicated this book to the late and great Charles L. Grant.
Need I say more?
Highly recommended reading!
JLR
Publishers Weekly starred review
This is the entire starred Publishers Weekly review:
Inferno Edited by Ellen Datlow. Tor, $25.95 (384p) ISBN 978-0-7653-1558-8
Datlow (The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror) makes a solid claim to being the premiere horror editor of her generation with this state-of-the-art anthology of 20 new stories by some of horror fiction's best and brightest. Several outstanding selections feature imperiled children and explore the horrific potential of childhood fears, among them Glen Hirshberg's "The Janus Tree," which gives a creepy supernatural spin to a poignant memoir of adolescent angst and alienation, and Stephen Gallagher's "Misadventure," in which a young man's near-death experience as a child endows him as an adult with consoling insight into the afterlife. The compilation's variety of approaches and moods is exemplary, ranging from the natural supernaturalism of Laird Barron's cosmic horror tale "The Forest," to the unsettling psychological horror of Lucius Shepard's "The Ease with Which We Freed the Beast"; the metaphysical terrors of Conrad Williams's "Perhaps the Last"; and the slapstick grotesquerie of K.W. Jeter's black comedy "Riding Bitch." If this book can be taken as a gauge of the vitality of imagination in contemporary horror fiction, then the genre is very healthy indeed.
(Dec.)
And chosen by PW as one of the best sf/f titles of the year.
More, Please.
I particularly like "Bethany's Wood" by Paul Finch, "Stilled Life" by Pat Cadigan, and "An Apiary of White Bees" by Lee Thomas. Oh, that stories like these have made it into YBFH 2008. I read the Datlow-chosen stories in YBFH 2007 right after reading Inferno and was disappointed; the story by Oates, in particular, seemed misplaced: I'm a fan of the bizarre, and this one seemed pointlessly grotesque instead. But Inferno is everything I look for in modern horror! I think it's Ellen's best book so far.




