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Dead of Winter

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Winner, 2021 International Book Awards, Anthologies
Award-Winning Finalist, 2020 Chanticleer Reviews Shorts
Eight chilling tales to read under the Cold Moon.
A tinker's son acquires a cursed soul. A dying woman is haunted by her own reflection. An uninvited presence haunts a Christmas seance. A festive holiday turns macabre.
Despite the twinkling lights and steaming cocoa, the end of the year is the darkest time of the year—a season of short days, long nights, and cold skies. In this special anniversary anthology, the authors of Black Spot Books mix Ye Olde Yuletide hauntings with modern-day holiday horrors to weave a chilling new collection of dark winter tales. From frozen forests stalked by eerie Christmas ghosts to rotting gifts of winter malice, the spirits of Christmas come home for the holidays in the Dead of Winter.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 5, 2020
      Ryan (editor, A Midnight Clear) brings together eight winter-themed tales of terror in this uneven anthology. The saving graces are Alcy Leyva’s “Sad Little Lump of Flesh,” a captivating tale about a young boy who finds an unidentifiable dead creature in his backyard, and Cassondra Windwalker’s “The Tinker’s Son,” a multifaceted dark fantasy about a witch named Margritte and her husband, a dragon lord, whose family faces tragedy. With the mildly amusing “The Face Inside the Christmas Ball,” Daniel Buella adds welcome tonal variety to the mix in the form of a family legend about evil spirits trapped in Christmas ornaments. Wooden dialogue, thin plots, and excessive exposition plague the remaining stories, including Sam Hooker’s “The Watchful Crow,” about an ex-con named Orville who employs crows to commit robberies on his behalf, and Dalena Storm’s “Frostbite,” which dives deep into the narrator’s self-hatred. Readers looking for a wintry fright will appreciate the few gems, but will be disappointed by the whole.

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2020
      Editor Ryan's selections perfectly fit the dark, gray, wintry mood that hits when cold weather has dragged on for too long. This anthology features eight short stories, each gripping, mind-bending, and truly creepy. The opening story, ""The Watchful Crow,"" by Sam Hooker, begins with a robber who's almost quirky and then slowly builds on the disquieting feeling that something isn't quite right with his chosen victim until the satisfying conclusion. Cassondra Windwalker's ""The Tinker's Son,"" flirts with light, romantic fantasy, and then flirts with horror when everything falls apart. ""The Face inside the Christmas Ball,"" by Daniel Buell, and ""Jolly Old Saint Ryan,"" by Laura Morrison, each play with old Christmas superstitions and the idea that Santa isn't who he seems. ""What Should Appear"" by N. J. Ember is a good old-fashioned horror show, featuring evil spirits and fraudulent psychics. Dead of Winter has something for every horror reader; each story is as engaging as the last and will leave readers wanting more from these authors.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2021

      Winter has always been a time for creepy stories. Before electricity, winter meant unyielding darkness, bitter cold, questions of survival, and monsters in the shadows. This collection harkens back to the time when the season and terror were synonymous. "A Face Inside the Christmas Ball" by Daniel Buell reimages the final days of a young boy's belief in the magic of Santa as a terrifying nightmare with mortal consequences. "The Tinker's Son" by Cassondra Windwalker, a native Alaskan who knows about long, dark nights firsthand, is a witch story framed as a menacing fairy tale featuring an engaging narration that begs the reader to enter its world from the first lines. In addition to these standouts, the volume includes six more stories that range from the terrifying to the atmospheric. This collection by emerging voices is worth curling up by the fire with--if you keep the lights on. VERDICT While COVID-related publishing shifts delayed this collection by a few months, readers will enjoy being immersed in these winter-themed stories any time of year. Pair it with the excellent collections of Victorian winter solstice and Christmas ghost stories published by Biblioasis.

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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