The children of Old Leech A tribute to the carnivorous cosmos of Laird Barron

Book - 2014

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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 808.83873/Children Checked In
Subjects
Published
Petaluma, CA : Word Horde [2014]
Language
English
Other Authors
Laird Barron (contributor)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"Characters, situations, and locales created by Laird Barron"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
331 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781939905024
  • Introduction: Of whisky and doppelgängers / Justin Steele
  • The harrow / Gemma Files
  • Pale apostle / J.T. Glover & Jesse Bullington
  • Walpurgisnacht / Orrin Grey
  • Learn to kill / Michael Cisco
  • Good Lord, show me the way / Molly Tanzer
  • Snake wine / Jeffrey Thomas
  • Love songs from the hydrogen jukebox / T.E. Grau
  • The old pageant / Richard Gavin
  • Notes from "the barn in the wild" / Paul Tremblay
  • Firedancing / Michael Griffin
  • The golden stars at night / Allyson Bird
  • The last crossroads on a calendar of yesterdays / Joseph S. Pulver, Sr.
  • The woman in the wood / Daniel Mills
  • Brushdogs / Stephen Graham Jones
  • Ymir / John Langan
  • Of a thousand cats / Cody Goodfellow
  • Tenebrionidae / Scott Nicolay & Jesse James Douthit-Nicolay
  • Afterword / Ross E. Lockhart.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Lockhart and Steele collect 17 original stories from some of the shining stars of modern horror, constructing a worm-riddled literary playground from elements of the fiction of horror maestro Laird Barron. The results come across with a coherent feeling of dread, without feeling derivative of the source. The Broken Ouroboros comes up in an academic study of a rural cult in Molly Tanzer's "Good Lord, Show Me the Way." The worms crawl in as tiny silkworms in J.T. Glover and Jesse Bullington's "Pale Apostle." Old Leech appears in the context of a hippie revival retreat in T.E. Grau's "Love Songs from the Hydrogen Jukebox." In Joseph S. Pulver, Sr.'s "The Last Crossroads on a Calendar of Yesterdays," The pages of the Black Guide become material for a golem built by a Jewish man driven insane from a childhood witnessing Nazi magic. A doppelganger of Barron himself features in a wonderfully creepy introduction by Steele. Hopefully Barron will enjoy this tribute; his fans certainly will. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved