Maybe this is much information, but since all of you use Booklist and Library Journal to craft your collections and help readers, I figured you'd be interested.
Well onto my draft review of an excellent collection, put out by a reliable and trusted small press, which you need to add to your collections. Lots of extra info as to why this book is an important add to your collections and a plea to buy his novel as well, all of hat is below.
First published September 1, 2023 (Booklist).
Keisling’s stories have appeared in critically acclaimed anthologies* alongside such established names as Josh Malerman, Gabino Iglesias, and Linda Addison, but this time, he shines on his own with 16 stories, 3 original to this volume. Utilizing well-trod Horror tropes like liminal spaces, haunted house, slashers, and body horror, he probes seriously scary topics like insatiable corporate greed, bullying, and mental health struggles in refreshing ways. Keisling is also a sought after artist, and his skill creating visual unease bleeds into his prose with stories that effortlessly immerse the reader into each story. Standouts include “Midnight in the Southland,” featuring an otherworldly radio show, “Annie’s Heart is a Haunted House," a teenage revenge slasher like you’ve never read, and “We’ve All Gone to Crooked Town, a nightmare on the page. The result, a collection of meaty, thought provoking, and terrifying tales that readers will happily sink their teeth into. For fans of stories by Sarah Read and RJ Joseph as well as anthologies edited by Doug Murano and John FD Taff.
*The Hideous Book of Hidden Horrors edited by Doug Murano just won the Shirley Jackson Award and Under Twin Suns: Alternate Histories of the Yellow Sign edited by James Chambers was nominated for the Bram Stoker.
Further Appeal: I want to stress how Keisling's excellence as a visual artist bleeds into his prose. It makes for a reading experience that includes sight without pictures.
Superior Achievement in a Novel
Jones, Stephen Graham – The Only Good Indians (Gallery/Saga Press) – WINNER
Katsu, Alma – The Deep (G.P. Putnam’s Sons)
Keisling, Todd – Devil’s Creek (Silver Shamrock Publishing)
Malerman, Josh – Malorie (Del Rey)
Moreno-Garcia, Silvia – Mexican Gothic (Del Rey)
Three Words That Describe This Book: immersive, nightmarish, thought provoking
Readalikes: I have plenty of suggestions above. Anyone who appears in those anthologies
is a good choice. Another Cemetery Dance author I think is a good realize as well is Alan Baxter. The two authors have appeared in anthologies together and I reviewed Baxter's novel Sallow Bend last year in Booklist.
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