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I see you, I hear you with Trixie - watch
I see you, I hear you with Katya - watch
Bloody Parchment edited by Nerine Dorman
Anthology of Short Horror Stories
What a wonderful way to be introduced to new-to-me authors that like to tell stories that are on the edge and creeped me out more than a little bit ;) Not so horrific it gave me nightmares but it did entertain and make me think.
Liam Kruger – “The Phenomenology of Iceland: A Romance”
A trip that is taken at the end of life and what one person met when she arrived.
Michelle Barry – “Toast”
What if inanimate objects were not…and could feel and become something unbelievable?
Chris Limb – “Scratchmind”
Oh my…Twitter and tweets that lead one tweeter to unbelievable insights into herself.
Morgen Knight – “Gods of Old, Anew”
A modern take on love, Mayan mythology and beliefs that left me shaken.
Arno Hurter – “A Place in Time”
Imagine a time in the future when your home was programmed to new locations in space and time.
Abigail Godsell – “Ordinary Sound”
Alien reptiles introduced – would make an interesting book.
Matt Hayward – “No One Gets Out of Here Alive”
A cult of believers that some want to blow away and put behind them for good.
Doreen Perrine – “Foul Things”
Someone new in the neighborhood…abuse…and more.
Icy Sedgwick – “Something Wicked This Way Slithered”
Ancient artifacts and a mummy make a huge difference in the lives of a young woman and her aunt.
Monique Snyman – “Tokoloshe”
Sometimes folklore is more real than one might believe.
Joshua de Kock – “Aquarium”
Yikes – this one creeped me out!
Ruth Browne – “Beachfront Starter Home, Good Bones”
Crabs, pentagons and a cult – creepy indeed.
Thank you to the publisher for the copy to read – this is my honest review.
5 Stars
[...] wouldn't it be frightening to be addicted to the future, at the expense of the present? How do we know we're not?
--Liam Kruger, Q and A: AfroSF contributors on Science Fiction in Africa, in Omenana issue 3