Reviews

The Best Horror of the Year, Volume 11 by Ellen Datlow

tombomp's review against another edition

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dark

3.75

I think I probably enjoyed this more just cause I haven't really read short stories in a while and I just found myself really absorbed in all the different kinds of stories people tell regardless of quality. There was maybe one outright clunker and the rest were all decent (even if they didn't really "hit") to great.

The worst for me was Monkeys on the Beach, which reminded me of the Salad Days Monty Python sketch. A bunch of bad things happen for no real reason and are bad enough to not feel realistic but also too realistic to be enjoyably absurd. It's 100% possible this was supposed to be funny and the humour just didn't hit. 

My favourite was Thumbsucker by Robert Shearman: an uncomfortable, disconcerting and slightly gross tale that's horror without anything that should be scary happening, combined with a sympathetic narrative about being old and lonely. Just a great one word concept that gets written wonderfully.

rodneywilhite's review against another edition

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3.0

I didn’t connect with all of the stories, but there are some true gems here. “Haunt” by Siobhan Carroll was probably my favorite.

kaitlinbisneau's review against another edition

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2.0

My personal favorite stories from this collection:

-Monkeys on the Beach by Ralph Robert
-Masks by Peter Sutton
-I Love You Mary-Grace by Amelia Manga
-A Brief Moment of Rage by Bill Davidson
-Golden Sun by Kristi DeMeester, Richard Thomas, Damien Angelica Walters, and Michael Wehunt
-No Exit by Orrin Grey

mamarabbit87's review against another edition

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4.0

Short stories are my favorite literary vessel. Sometimes when Im burnt out i grab an anthology like this and discover some amazing authors.

Favorites- I Remember Nothing
-The Donner Party
-Milkteeth
-A Brief Moment of Rage
-Sleep- This one is going to stay with me for awhile! just WOW!

geve_'s review against another edition

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2.0

I really didn't like this collection.

Good(ish, honestly this is just the top story, not even 4 stars tbh):
Haunt

Neutral:
Back along the old track
Masks
a brief moment of rage

Bad:
The rest of the stories.

This really missed for me. I don't know why, a few of these felt really amateur to me, even feeling like they would be posted on nosleep instead of being published like this. There are a few big names here, but even they didn't really do it. I don't know how I can dislike this many horror short stories in a row, I was just shocked at how clunky and bad these were. There were a fair number of fantasy/horror with full on world builds which is really not what I'm looking for in a short story, also getting sick of the woman who is sad/overburdened and wants to kill her child trope and making that into a whole short story. Overdone at this point.

wildgurl's review against another edition

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5.0

The Best Horror of The Year: Volume Eleven
Edited by Ellen Datlow
due 9-1-2019
Night Shade Books
5.0 / 5.0

#netgalley. #TheBestHorrorOfTheYear

This is one of the best horror collections I've read. Features some of the most terrifying short stories and novellas by a wide variety of authors, from different horror genres. Every single story was good, the 2 most creepy to me were 'Thumbsucker' by Robert Shearman and 'The Donner Party' by Dale Bailey.
Others I also really liked were:
'I Remember Nothing' by Anne Billson
'You Know How The Story Goes' by Thomas Olde Heuvelt
'Girl Without Their Faces On' by Laird Barron
'You Are Released' by Joe Hill

I highly recommend this....just in time for Halloween!
Thanks to #netgalley and the publisher for sending this requested e-book ARC for review.

bleepbloop's review against another edition

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first three stories were really bad. really disappointing.

jiggityjog's review

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adventurous dark mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? N/A
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

4.5

novels_only's review against another edition

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Stories not that great

megapolisomancy's review against another edition

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4.0

You know the drill with these.

I Remember Nothing – Anne Billson
A woman wakes up with no memory of the night before, next to a man she doesn't know and draws the obvious conclusions, which turn out to be wrong. Gorier than I usually like, although I appreciated the nightmare urgency and confusion of the whole scenario. Surreal body horror, emphasis on the horror (and the bodily fluids). From an anthology of stories inspired by Joy Division's Unknown Pleasures - I think we're running out of anthology themes.

Monkeys on the Beach – Ralph Robert Moore
A young second wife vacations with her husband and stepchildren on a Carribean island. Cultural differences are throwing everything off-kilter before the outright surreal tragedies start. Ends in a jackhammer stream of brutally short, chopping sentences. I really liked this one. Fictional step parents don't often get a chance to shine!

Painted Wolves – Ray Cluley
In South Africa's Kruger National Park, a crew(the sad sack sound guy narrator, a bully, and a lackey) and the Z-list celebrity host (a starlet whose closest claim to fame was being on Big Brother) of the nature documentary they're making are briefly stalked by African hunting dogs. Violence comes from another direction. I'm torn about this one - I would love to never read another story about this kind of violence for the rest of my life, but it was well-written, the dogs were suitably creepy (and a nice red herring), the structure (addressed from the sad sack to the starlet) was nice, and the ending dissolution was well-differentiated from the previous narrative.

Shit Happens – Michael Marshall Smith
Literally. Shit zombies. Do with that what you will.

You Know How the Story Goes – Thomas Olde Heuvelt
An urban legend role reversal where the narrator/victim is the hitchhiker picked up by a supernatural entity in Croatia. The Tall Lady is a creepy presence of ever-shifting proportions, but she doesn't make up for an annoying narrative voice and the whole thing felt a bit too creepypasta (ugh) for me.

Back Along the Old Track – Sam Hicks
English folk horror about a creepy, isolated family and an anxious visitor from the city. Shades of Poroth Farm, always a good thing. Doesn’t quite stick the landing but for the author’s first published work this is very impressive.

Masks - Peter Sutton
A sharp little number about shipwreck survivors that nicely trickles out details and knows exactly when to end. More surreal than she usually worked, but echoes Shirley Jackson.

The Donner Party - Dale Bailey
Cannibals, but not the ones you think. Unsettling class politics in Victorian England, also exactly as long as it needed to be and with a sharp, perfect ending. I really need to dig more deeply into Bailey's work - I was just thinking about "I Was a Teenage Werewolf" the other day.

Milkteeth - Kristi DeMeester
Another anthology mainstay, DeMeester continues to hone a very particular and personal kind of story: nightmarish, hazy, focused on women’s/girls' experiences of family and predation and socialization. Beautiful work.

Haak - John Langan
An astonishing cavalcade of literary allusions and nested narratives hinging on Peter (The Great God) Pan bookended by a paean to the power of teaching.

Thin Cold Hands - Gemma Files
A changeling story, an undead(?) fairy(?) facetiously(?) compared to Tinkerbell (hints of Haak!). Creepy but something about the prose style kept me from connecting with it fully. Files knows what she's doing so this was probably on purpose.

A Tiny Mirror - Eloise C. C. Shepherd
A child's imaginary(?) friend helps him cope with his father's death. Builds a mood nicely but then it's over just as it seems like it's getting going. Rather old-fashioned, right up to the strangely inconsequential framing device.

I Love You Mary-Grace - Amelia Mangan
A deconstructed werewolf story, the narrator's ennui and loneliness channeled through choppy sentences and increasingly-sensory details of rural poverty and suburban disconnection. Good stuff!

The Jaws of Ouroboros - Steve Toase
Standing stones turn out to be mysterious mouths that begin devouring the UK. An intriguing setup, although I had a bit of trouble following the imagery on a mechanical level, and the actual plot of drugdealing savagery didn't do much for me.

A Brief Moment of Rage - Bill Davidson
A deconstructed zombie story (sensing a theme here?); short and punchy, with a great last line.

Golden Sun – Kristi DeMeester, Richard Thomas, Damien Angelica Walters, and Michael Wehunt
Four recollections about a middle child's disappearance on a family vacation. Creepy refrains, unreliable(ish) narrators, vague and unsettling, just the way I like it.

White Mare - Thana Niveau
Mari-Lwyd-adjacent folk horror about an American girl and her single dad inheriting a house in the UK that comes with a horse BFF. Very YA-ish (ie not the way I like it).

Girls Without Their Faces On - Laird Barron
A woman realizes her mysterious new boyfriend is privy to things that should not be. Excellent cosmic horror about final girls and Alaska. There's one absolutely haunting scene in this one (involving puppet strings) that I'm going to be hung up on for a long time.

Thumbsucker - Robert Shearman
A man’s elderly father starts sucking his thumb after dinner one day, which seems to be a social phenomenon. Shades of “Dangerous Laughter,” loneliness, and human contact. Not really horror but I’m glad to have read it.

You Are Released - Joe Hill
A passenger jet full of caricatures take turns relaying the beginning of a nuclear WWIII. A real throwback, both to Cold War era apocalyptic fiction and to 2017's momentary panic over North Korea threatening Guam. Hill never connects with me.

Red Rain - Adam-Troy Castro
Bodies begin to rain from the sky. Incredibly bloody and effectively stressfully told in a second person interrogative voice (Note that that's how I reviewed Datlow's collection last year and my lawyers will be contacting Castro soon). This sort of gorefest is usually very much not to my taste but the voice and narrative momentum of this story is undeniable. Very good stuff.

Split Chain Stitch - Steve Toase
A knitting club is up to no good and the cop trying to infiltrate them comes to no good end. Rather pro forma, down to the ominous knitting instructions sprinkled throughout.

No Exit - Orrin Grey
Years after a cult massacre, the sister of one of the victims lets her curiosity get the better of her. Feels like a strong Barron influence (a good thing), until the very un-LB ending, not the usual kind of denouement I enjoy but here it was effective.

Haunt - Siobhan Carroll
A slow shipwreck and _something_ out in the storm prompt confessions from the crewmembers who used to work the slave trade. Heavy, wonderfully realized, absolutely crushing.

Sleep - Carly Holmes
An absolutely harrowing story of the exhaustion of single mothers, especially those whose child is some sort of sleep vampire. An excellent end to the volume.