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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good horror
If you enjoy modern horror fiction, there is a great collection in this book. From the unsettling to the weird, this book has a collection of stories that are a quick read and leave you unsettled, creeped out, or depressed. Its great!
Published 11 months ago by royzilla

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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Best Horror of the Year Volume Two
The back cover tells us "legendary" editor Ellen Datlow ... Hold up, stop right there for a minute. "Legendary"? Isn't that a little ostentatious? "Venerated," sure; "well-respected," definitely; "award-winning," undeniable; but "legendary"? That's a descriptor best used in barroom tall tales and children's bedtime stories. "Boys, did I ever tell you the Legend of Ellen...
Published 6 months ago by jonathan briggs


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good horror, February 6, 2011
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This review is from: The Best Horror of the Year Volume 2 (Paperback)
If you enjoy modern horror fiction, there is a great collection in this book. From the unsettling to the weird, this book has a collection of stories that are a quick read and leave you unsettled, creeped out, or depressed. Its great!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good collection of dark fiction, July 16, 2011
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This review is from: The Best Horror of the Year Volume 2 (Paperback)
I have to admit I was a bit let down by volume one of The Best Horror of the Year. For my taste, I found the stories a bit dry and slow and lacking in personality. I'm happy to say the series comes back with bang with volume two. Overall, I found this group of stories far more lively and unsettling. My favories were the creepy "each thing i show you is a piece of my death" and the utterly wonderful "What Happens When You Wake up in the Night." I'd also like to call out "Mrs. Midnight" by Reggie Oliver, which was filled with personality and was exactly what I was missing in volume one. I'm now very much looking for to volume three.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Best Horror of the Year Volume Two, July 26, 2011
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This review is from: The Best Horror of the Year Volume 2 (Paperback)
The back cover tells us "legendary" editor Ellen Datlow ... Hold up, stop right there for a minute. "Legendary"? Isn't that a little ostentatious? "Venerated," sure; "well-respected," definitely; "award-winning," undeniable; but "legendary"? That's a descriptor best used in barroom tall tales and children's bedtime stories. "Boys, did I ever tell you the Legend of Ellen Datlow? On my soul, every word is true." A legendary editor would take the time to ensure all the typos got swept out of her book. Anyway, back to the cover copy: It promises that editor Ellen Datlow (legendary or not) "knows what scares us." If that's so, I wonder why she's holding back in this book. But that's OK, I'm a hard guy to bug out. The book's not scary, but is it any good?

Suzy McKee Charnas kicks off this volume with "Lowland Sea," a modern take on Poe's "Masque of the Red Death." A vapid movie star (is there any other kind?) and his entourage take refuge in a private compound in Cannes, partying non-stop while a plague outside the walls holds dominion over all. It's an interesting spin on Poe's tale, but that's as far as it goes. Charnas sets up her high concept, then ends the story.

The best of 2009's best horror is "each thing i show you is a piece of my death," a powerhouse collaboration between Gemma Files and Stephen Barringer. The story is told in high-tech epistolary fashion, in a collage of blog entries, police reports, e-mails and interview transcripts that mirrors rapidly evolving communication media. That format doesn't leave a lot of room for character development, but it enhances the documentary feel of the piece, intensifying the chilly feeling that this story of a literally viral video and its morbidly voyeuristic death cult of personality could be real.

Also stylistically daring is Micaela Morrissette's "Wendigo," but to no good purpose. I'm all for the New Weird. I think it's one of the most exciting (non)movements in the fantasy/horror genres, but I see too many random collections of surreal imagery and descriptions of slime, cephalopods and decadence wandering around in search of a story to serve. "Wendigo" was written as a companion piece to a pig flesh art project. Yea, I kinda figured.

"The Nimble Men" starts off great, offering a quick hit of creepy as a commuter flight crew is stuck on a rural runway amid snow, spooky woods, weird lights and a reticent air-traffic control tower. But that's not important enough for Glen Hirshberg. He has to make some grand statement about grief, and soon, as in most Hirshberg stories, everybody busts out weeping. Glen Hirshberg is the emo rocker of the horror genre.

Norman Prentiss' "In the Porches of My Ears" doesn't even seem to be a horror story until a nasty little stinger hits you at the end. Nicely done. I didn't see it coming. I'm keeping my eye on Prentiss.

Kaaron Warren's "The Gaze Dogs of Nine Waterfall" has something to do with vampire pets, and yes, it's every bit as stupid as it sounds.

There are a couple more Poe pastiches in honor of the 200th year since the poet's birth, but nothing anyone will remember for near that long.

The book cover hyperbole continues, asserting that "every year the bar is raised." Well, not really. This is very much like Volume One. The stories are mostly competent (aside from the aforementioned typos), but rarely anything more. There's very little here to reassure a disheartened horror fan that the genre is alive and healthy or even poised for a revival in the near future. In Datlow's recap of horror publications in 2009, most of the novels she singles out as exceptional sound more like crime or fantasy fiction. I finished the book and looked back over the Table of Contents and honestly could not remember a thing about a few of the selections. Datlow is going to have to be a lot more discerning and exacting in her fiction choices if she wants to earn that "legendary" adjective. Maybe she'll get her chance in Volume Three.
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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Some good, some bad, July 16, 2010
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This review is from: The Best Horror of the Year Volume 2 (Paperback)
If this was the best short story horror from 2009, it must have been slim pickings indeed. Some of the stories I wouldn't consider "horror", so I'm confused as to why these stories were included. Filler material perhaps? When I read a horror story, I like to think "Yikes!" afterwards. Maybe I am setting the bar too high and expecting too much.
I like the way Datlow summerizes different books and anthologies from the year at the beginning; I've been able to find several good books from the list.
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3 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars just what I was looking for, May 2, 2010
This review is from: The Best Horror of the Year Volume 2 (Paperback)
This is a very good collection of short stories and is just what I was looking for.
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The Best Horror of the Year Volume 2
The Best Horror of the Year Volume 2 by Ellen Datlow (Paperback - March 9, 2010)
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