mulkurul's review

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Girls Without Their Faces On by Laird Barron ☆☆☆☆

markthulhu's review

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2.0

This is a top-tier list of authors, many of which I count as my favourites, yet for some reason this anthology just felt dull and plodding. It's not you, Ashes and Entropy; it's me :(

qalminator's review

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Starting with the stories in the Tor Lovecraft reread, then I'll probably go back and start from the beginning with the rest.
The Gray Room by Tim Waggoner
The Head On the Door by Erinn L. Kemper
Flesh Without Blood by Nadia Bulkin
Scraps by Max Booth III
Yellow House by Jon Padgett
What Finds Its Way Back by Damien Angelica Walters
We All Speak Black by Lynne Jamneck
Ain't Much Pride by Nate Southard
The Choir of the Tunnels by Matthew B. Hare
Amity In Bloom by Jessica McHugh
Red Stars / White Snow / Black Metal by Fiona Maeve Geist
Shadowmachine by Autumn Christian
The One About Maggie by Greg Sisco
Breakwater by John Langan
For Our Skin, A Daughter by Kristi DeMeester
Houdini: The Egyptian Paradigm by Lisa Mannetti
Girls Without Their Faces On by Laird Barron
Dr. 999 by Matthew M. Bartlett
Leaves of Dust by Wendy Nikel (4 stars, 4 tentacles) - Nicely written tale of isolation, and escape from isolation.
The Kind Detective by Lucy A. Snyder
The Levee Breaks by Jayaprakash Satyamurthy
I Can Give You Life by Paul Michael Anderson

josephvanburen's review against another edition

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5.0

This is an awesome collection of cosmic horror, weird fiction, and neo-noir, and every story in this anthology is amazing in its own way. I am not sure I've ever said that before. I love anthologies, but there is usually a dud or three. Not in this one. While I did enjoy some more than others, every story is well-written. 22 twisted tales from some authors I already liked and a bunch I'd never read before. If you like weird and/or creepy short stories with a side of poetic prose, this is a must-read!

starship's review

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dark emotional medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? N/A
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

lesliebee's review against another edition

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3.0

(3.5 Stars)

brucemri's review

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5.0

What a marvelous anthology this is! I can't recall when I last read a horror anthology so immensely strong from start to finish, and casting a wide net through what's good in horror fiction at the moment. Here are stories of cosmic horror (Lucy Snyder's "The Kind Detective" is, I think, my personal favorite of the volume) and of intimate personal strangeness; stories in which what's wrong with the characters' world is spelled out in intense clarity and stories in which their transgressions and the violations of their world are evoked or approached indirectly; stories set in the present, past, and future; stories in which clear direct prose conveys horrific feeling and stories in which tangled, disjointed prose is part of the experience of escalating wrongness. The old cliche about "There's something here for everyone!" is truer of Ashes and Entropy than just about anything I've read in a long time - whatever readers may like in quality horror, it's likely in here somewhere. Wow. I am delighted and satisfied, and give this my highest recommendation.
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