Departments
Apparel
Baby
Beauty
Books
Classical Music
DVD
Digital Music
Electronics
Gourmet Food
Personal Health Care
Jewelry
Kitchen & Housewares
Magazines
Miscellaneous
Music
Musical Instruments
Music Tracks
Office Products
Outdoor Living
PC Hardware
Photo
Restaurants
Software
Sporting Goods
Tools & Hardware
Toys
VHS
Video (DVD & VHS)
VideoGames
Wireless
Wireless Accessories
Information
Payment Methods
Shipping
Safe Shopping
Contact Us

 

US Mall 1 - From the Borderlands: Stories of Terror and Madness

From the Borderlands: Stories of Terror and Madness
List Price: $7.50
Our Price: $3.77
Your Save: $ 3.73 ( 50% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Warner Books
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5

Buy it now at Amazon.com!

Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.0873808
EAN: 9780446610353
ISBN: 0446610356
Label: Warner Books
Manufacturer: Warner Books
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 448
Publication Date: 2004-09-01
Publisher: Warner Books
Studio: Warner Books

Related Items

Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Borderlands
Comment: Most of the stories in this book are good. A few of them were just downright ridiculous and I skipped over them but, for the most part, this book is worth the read.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Good and Bad
Comment: This is a book of short stories by various, mostly new, authors. While I found the book searching for Stephen King books, only one story is authored by him. The stories themselves are a mix. Some are very good and others not so good.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: borderlands
Comment: FROM THE BORDERLANDS ARRIVED ON TIME AND IN EXCELLANT CONDITION. i HAVE READ IT YET. iT WAS PACKAGED VERY GOOD

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Not THAT weak, but not splatterpunk! Good spooky stories, no gore.
Comment: Not exactly what I expected, but still worth reading. Good stories but not super scary or splatterpunkish.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5
Summary: Shockingly weak
Comment: In the early to mid-nineties, White Wolf (oh, how I miss their original fiction line) published a set of four anthologies under the title of BORDERLANDS. The only real rule was that there weren't any. Authors were encouraged to experiment. Clichés and common subject matter were to be avoided. These turned out to be four of the best collections of dark fiction ever published. The stories were original, diverse, and memorable.

After a nine-year gap, this fifth anthology finally appeared. What a disappointment.

FROM THE BORDERLANDS is filled with rambling, forgettable, often incoherent rubbish. The ubiquitous Bentley Little, an author who has essentially built a career on writing the same novel over and over, seems to think he can put any kind of bizarre nonsense down on paper and get it published. Unfortunately for us, he's right. (Little is the only author to have appeared in all five anthologies.) His piece appears to have been transcribed directly from a bad dream he might have had. It makes no sense - an absolute head-scratcher. Far too many of the stories are like this. The worst are both incoherent and tedious, like Barbara Malenky's "A Thing," whose narrator is barely literate.

Seeing the editors gush praise about each entry in the introductions only adds insult. I actually thought the Monteleones must have been on drugs when they read for this volume.

Out of twenty-five stories, only a few are worth a look:

"Rami Temporalis" by Gary Braunbeck: Joel has one of those faces, the kind anyone can trust, even a complete stranger. One day, he finds out why. Though the ending is anticlimactic considering the grand nature of what is revealed, this story involves a truly interesting philosophical idea and is exactly the kind of imaginative tale that should appear in these books.

"N0072-JK1" by Adam Corbin Fusco: I'm a sucker for stories that are done as scientific transcripts. You know that they are gradually building to something awful but you can't stop reading: the horror story in its purest form. The deeper unease, I think, comes from knowing that humans are, in fact, capable of doing terrible things in the name of research, and that maybe it isn't far-fetched at all. This one involves a study of the nature of tickling, one that leads to sinister and disturbing conclusions.

"Infliction" by John McIlveen: A delinquent father goes in search of his runaway daughter and finds that sometimes the only way to erase old scars is to create new ones.

"Around It Still the Sumac Grows" by Tom Piccirilli: A man returns to his high school after twenty years to retrieve something he left behind. Piccirilli's tales usually have a surreal quality to them, but not so much that you feel like he's blowing hot air (which is how I felt about most of the stories here.) Besides, I've revisited my old school many years later as well, and it is indeed a surreal experience.

Collections like this make me sad, this one even more so because I'm aware of the potential it had. BORDERLANDS number five is largely a waste of time. I hope the good stories get reprinted somewhere else.


Buy it now at Amazon.com!

Copyright © US Mall 1. All rights reserved.