The Black girl survives in this one Horror stories

Book - 2024

A collection of fiften horror stories centering on Black girls who battle monsters, both human and supernatural, face down death, and survive.

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Black
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Subjects
Genres
Horror fiction
Short stories
Published
New York : Flatiron Books 2024.
Language
English
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiii, 354 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 12-18.
ISBN
9781250871657
  • Harvesters / L.L. McKinney
  • Welcome back to the cosmos / Kortney Nash
  • Ghost light / Eric E. Adams
  • The brides of Devil's Bayou / Desiree S. Evans
  • TMI / Zakiya Dalila Harris
  • Black pride / Justina Ireland
  • The screamers / Daka Hermon
  • Queeniums for Greenium! / Brittney Morris
  • Ihnheritance / Camara Aaron
  • Black girl nature group / Maika Moulite and Maritza Moulite
  • Cemetery dance party / Saraciea J. Fennell
  • The skittering thing / Monica Brashears
  • The black strings / Vincent Tirado
  • Local color / Eden Royce
  • Foxhunt / Charlotte Nicole Davis.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Using authentic voices to detail Black experiences through a horror lens, debut creator Evans and Fennell (Wild Tongues Can't Be Tamed) aim to ensure that Black girls survive their gruesome respective situations via a stellar lineup of 15 Black writers--including Zakiya Dahlia Harris, Justina Ireland, and Brittney Morris--in this unforgettable collaboration. L.L. McKinney sets the tone with the fast-paced, spine-chilling "Harvesters," in which teens attend a house party that goes awry and end up being hunted by monsters in a "ghost corn" field. Other stories feature genre-bending themes of fantasy, romance, and sci-fi; Kourtney Nash's "Welcome Back to the Cosmos" paints a terrorizing picture of a space explorer struggling to do her job while remembering the myths her mother told her about beings "stealing faces." Through vivid dialogue and descriptions of ancestral practices like hoodoo, Black culture remains at the forefront of each story, as in anthology editor Desiree S. Evans's "The Brides of Devil's Bayou," in which a Black teen fights a demon that for generations has been abducting girls from one family the day they turn 19. An insightful foreword by Tananarive Due outlines a brief history of how Black girls are portrayed in horror. Ages 12--up. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A well-crafted horror anthology containing 15 stories that cleverly reimagine familiar tropes and cliches. In their dedication, editors and contributors Evans and Fennell address "all the Black girls who have been aching to…come out on top as the Final Girl." Defying the genre's preference for centering white heroines, this collection features Black girls who are fighters and survivors, breakers of generational curses and slayers of evil. The stories contain deft social commentary, and many investigate the monstrosities of the human condition. Cinematic standouts include Justina Ireland's "Black Pride," a radical take on werewolves set during the era of the Black Panther Party; Brittney Morris' "Queeniums for Greenium!," about a reluctant newcomer to a cult disguised as a multilevel marketing group; and Charlotte Nicole Davis' "Foxhunt," starring a high schooler who becomes the intended prey for a fatal game based on the brutality of chattel slavery. Other authors delve into paranormal frights shaped by cultural folklore, such as Evans' "The Brides of Devil's Bayou," which follows a college student from rural Louisiana who returns home to confront a maternal inheritance involving a terrifying deal with a demon. This collection provides much-needed representation of Black girls who refuse to be martyrs, sassy sidekicks, or casualties on the path to a white character's inevitable triumph. An engaging volume that breathes necessary life into the horror genre, showcasing the best of what goes bump in the night. (contributor biographies) (Horror anthology. 13-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.