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The Mammoth Book of Terror
 
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The Mammoth Book of Terror (Paperback)

de Stephen Jones (Editor)
4.5étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 évaluations de client)

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From Publishers Weekly

Terror fans surely will devour this ample collection from masters of the genre. Beginning with Clive Barker's novella "The Last Illusion," the tale of a magician's deal with the devil and its consequences, and ending with the unspeakably gory "Pig's Dinner" by Graham Masterton, the volume will surprise and horrify hardcore devotees and newcomers alike. The one exception may be Stephen Laws's "Junk," the story of a junk dealer who refuses to deliver the goods to an ungodly stet cap/pk Stranger. Alert readers will predict the conclusion almost from the start. Lisa Tuttle's "The Horse Lord" is a wonderful, traditional, spooky story with a supernatural theme that will keep readers guessing until the last paragraph. But terror's always better when the bad guys get what they deserve, as in "Out of Copyright," a piece by Ramsey Campbell that should scare writers into keeping their copyrights current. The science fiction field also is well represented by "The Late Shift," by Dennis Etchison, a tale that compels us to give cashiers a second glance. Jones is a British horror writer.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From School Library Journal

YA-- A widely varied collection of stories and styles. The tales run the gamut from the thought-provoking splatter of F. Paul Wilson to the gothically inspired fright of Hugh B. Cave. It is just this variety that makes this anthology so enjoyable. Each entry has its own brief introduction and, since the stories do not revolve around a central theme, each must stand, or fall, on its own merits. YAs will shudder to learn what most adults already know: terror has many forms. --Phillip J. Clark, R. E. Lee High School, Springfield, VA
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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2 évaluations
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4.5étoiles sur 5 (2 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 give us the terror, Avril 8 2003
this is an interesting collection. 4 great stories by Tuttle, Chetwynd-Hayes, and others. a few ok stories here too. that makes it pretty good for an anthology. well picked. not bad invented stories. more plot-driven stories than in most anthologies.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 variety is the spice of life, Oct. 28 1998
There are only two other horror anthologies that I think are better than this one, and those two really ARE classics (THE DARK DESCENT and GREAT TALES OF TERROR AND THE SUPERNATURAL) Not only are the stories in this anthology very good, but offer a very wide variety of horror tales. Many different "flavors" of terror are available in this collection, from nice suspensful terror, to really visceral horror at something unspeakable occurring, to the completely physical revulsion to seeing a living mammal pulped in a feed thresher. Nice touch, that. There are vampires and Things Out of Time, possession tales and Mysterious Strangers. My favorites included: a short gothic horror novel ("Murgunstrumm" by Hugh B. Cave), Lumley's Lovecraftian "The House of the Temple", a real gem by Ramsey Campbell ("Out of Copyright") that ought to make the most jaundiced reader of horror think a little whenever s/he thumbs open a familiar text, and a simply AWESOME story by Lisa Tuttle ("The Horse Lord"). Rober Bloch's "Yugoslaves" shows why he's a master, and "The Jumpity-Jim" by R. Chetwyd-Hayes is a pretty nasty little tale. These are just the very best of the stories there; all of them are pretty good. Stephen Laws' "Junk" deserves mention as well. Jeesh. "The Black Drama" might give away its punchline a bit too soon, but it still provides some nice pulpy entertainment. All in all, this collection EARNS its 11 bucks worth of chills.
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