Reviews and Comments

peachfiend

peachfiend@books.theunseen.city

Joined 1 year, 7 months ago

T1D #xennial #genderflux #enby living in a dangerous land (USA).

you'll find me reading (mostly, at the moment): #Horror, especially #CosmicHorror and #BodyHorror (ya know, #queer stuff), #SciFi, and #WeirdFiction.

haunting local bookshops and libraries in #Louisville #KY.

@peachfiend@mastodon.sdf.org

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finished reading Great Expectations (English Library) by Charles Dickens (Penguin English Library)

Charles Dickens, Angus Calder: Great Expectations (English Library) (Paperback, 1965, Penguin Classics)

Great Expectations (first published in 1860/61) is one of the most mature and serious of …

i read this as part of a bingo card from my local bookshop. it was "book you hated or never finished in school," and it turns out i still hate it. it's not objectively bad, though i could make that case. rather, it's a coldplay album: it shines in some small moments, but is passed right through me. ultimately forgettable, and i didn't really need or want it. a story that didn't need telling.

Lucy A. Snyder: Sister, Maiden, Monster (2023, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

A virus tears across the globe, transforming its victims in nightmarish ways. As the world …

clever combinations of horror subgenres and cultural touchpoints

Content warning lightly spoiled

Lee Mandelo: The Woods All Black (EBook, 2024, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

The Woods All Black is equal parts historical horror, trans romance, and blood-soaked revenge, all …

Content warning spoilers, sexual content

Alison Rumfitt: Brainwyrms (2023, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

When a transphobic woman bombs Frankie’s workplace, she blows up Frankie’s life with it. As …

Unsubtle. Hard to read, easy to parse.

The author adds her own content warning at the introduction, so I needn't provide that here. But do take her at her word. Presumably one is not reading a horror title by an author noted for being "unabashedly transgressive" expecting a pleasant ride, but I guess you never know. The blurb, "Shocking, grotesque, and downright filthy, Brainwyrms confronts the creeping reality of political terrorism while exploring the depths of love, pain and identity," about sums it up. Rumfitt and her metaphors are not subtle. For my taste, I would even say she is heavy-handed, though seemingly self-aware about it. I'm biased and a sucker for it anything accurately described as "grotesque," especially (it seems) related to trans body horror.