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The Monster Within Idea: A Story Collection [Kindle Edition]

R. Thomas Riley
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)

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Book Description

The monsters lurk in everyone: monsters of greed, of guilt, of the pleasure found in pain, of the pain found when pleasure dies. Carefully disguised, the monsters can sit down beside you or take up residence within you at the slightest twist of fate. Will you try to stop them? Will you want to?

This collection of 18 stories from R. Thomas Riley deftly explores the monsters born of the human mind. “Attrition” offers a future prison system that frees only those who repent sincerely—but what can an inmate do if he finds that sincerity is not really the key? “Twin Thieves” and “Tautology” throw a devilish spin on relationships gone wrong, while “The Lesser Evil” twists the abuses of race and power into a gritty, noirish nightmare of the choices a man must make to protect a lesser man and a greater good. In “Touching God,” a young man’s past catches up to him when worlds bleed into each other and the past crosses into present, bringing back the abuse he once escaped and the brother who wasn’t so lucky.
Sacrifice, selfishness, and the worst of good intentions: all combine in The Monster Within Idea. From vampires and aliens to hit women and Wild Bill Hickock, Riley gives a subtle psychological turn to dark science fiction and horror. Let the monsters walk the paths of your mind. The idea is already within.


“Riley is dark and disturbing. The Monster Within Idea pulled me into his horrific world and I loved every minute of it.”
—John Grover, author of Space Stations and Graveyards, A Beckoning of Shadows and the upcoming Angels, Ashes and Alchemy

“The Monster Within Idea is a fun ride, dark, disturbing and well written. Riley started off strong and is only getting stronger. Highly recommended!”
—James A. Moore, author of Deeper and Cherry Hill

“A natural storyteller with a concise voice, R. Thomas Riley truly entertains in this collection. Unsettling at times, truly compelling, Riley’s moody & wild tales kick hard and crank the appetite for more.”
—Steven L. Shrewsbury, author of Hawg, Tormentor and Godforsaken

“R. Thomas Riley is a rising star. When you see those zombie and vampires digging their way up from the grave, and you see that hand break the surface of the earth, the backdrop a tombstone, you see one on his way up--that's a guy named R. Thomas Riley.” — Robert W. Walker, Kindle Bestselling author of more than 40 novels, including the Instinct series and Edge series

“With the eponymous story [ R. Thomas Riley ] manages to create, in just four short pages, what Stephen King tried to hard (and ultimately failed) to do with The Colorado Kid, an utterly captivating yet completely unsolvable mystery that doesn’t resort to any cheap cop-outs. Concise, confident and bewildering as all holy f*%@, this is how to do it. A pure experience of paranoia and horror of the truest Lovecraftian sense, this bastard kicked my ass all the way to next Tuesday.”
— Anton Cancre

“Creepy, visceral and evocative stories than make you grin while your skin puckers in goose bumps. They lead you to the edge of the precipice and then drop you over to a satisfying conclusion—be it a sudden crash at the end or the revelation of wings.”
 —Jennifer Brozek—editor of The Edge of Propinquity

“…You’ll find yourself tearing through this book as if your life depended on it…”
—
K.D. Payne

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

R. Thomas Riley, an active member of ITW, is an internationally published author (print/digital media) living in the distant lands of North Dakota. His short story collection The Monster Within Idea (2009-2011) was published by Apex Publications. If God Doesn’t Show co-written with John Grover will be published by Permuted Press in 2012 and released as an audio book from Audible.com. Flesh of Fallen Angels co-written with Roy C. Booth will be published by Grand Mal Press in 2012. Diaphanous co-written with Roy C. Booth is available now. The Day Lufberry Won It All was adapted to short film by Frosty Moon Omnimedia in 2010. Riley is also the co-founder of KOTANORTH Films. You can visit his web home at www.rthomasriley.com

Product Details

  • File Size: 363 KB
  • Print Length: 265 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1468031066
  • Publisher: MinnKota Publications; 2nd edition (December 4, 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B006IYGGB4
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #191,971 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

This collection of short stories comes highly recommended. Shauna Klein  |  6 reviewers made a similar statement
After reading this collection, R. Thomas Riley became one of my favorite writers. B. Eads  |  4 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Written with a strong and enthralling voice September 10, 2010
Format:Paperback
The Monster Within Idea is a horrific, heart-felt, and hopeful collection of short fiction that explores what lies within us all: the monster. Riley's ability to toy with us psychologically affords the reader little protest by creating people--not characters--faced with relatable dilemmas and odds just as uncertain as the reality in which they exist. Each story in the collection is a real treat for the imagination and the diversity is sure to please. Standouts are:

"Touching God", two young brothers endure a life of pain from a father who enjoys abusing them. In hushed whispers, they contemplate escaping and going away. To where? It wouldn't really matter. But James wonders when the abuse becomes more frequent, and his brother spends more time with his toy train-set in the basement. "It's a secret" his brother promises him, and it's a big one.

"Twin Thieves", Milton would do anything to have his wife back. Their marriage, at first wonderful, somehow took a turn for the worse. His mind is bent on what exactly went wrong as it rifles through memory after memory of bliss; longing to find that moment of understanding. Once discovering a way to augment this, Milton plays guinea-pig to the incessant dilemma of forgetting today in favor of what was and what could be.

"Bubo", Darrel walks into a bar looking for someone only spoken of in whispers: Bubo, with a problem only he can solve. Darrel has cancer and it is only a matter of time before the inevitable happens. Can the coldest of hearts pay a price even Darrel regrets? And once made, what happens to his cancer?

The Day Lufberry Won It All", in a distant, dystopian future, Lufberry walks into a bar hoping to hustle someone for money at a game of Pool. To his surprise, this bar has his favorite vices of cigarettes and alcohol and best of all, gambling. When he takes a bet from a kid over a simple game of Pool, will he walk away with the kid's other-worldly billiard balls? Or will he walk away with nothing...or something worse?

"Just Decoration", Toni solves, "people problems" and she's damn good at it. She's offered the job of killing, and publicly displaying the body of a prominent businessman. She accepts with enthusiasm. Toni breaks her professionalism in favor of personal gain. But will it make the kill as sweet?

"The Lesser Evil", Mark Fitzgerald is a politician in every evil sense that word has come to embody. The man has done bad things. Real bad things. Or has he? Jimmy, and his partner, "triple KKK" wonder as they take care of another one of Fitzgerald's messes. Once the truth is known, a decision must be made that shakes a man to his core and changes his life forever.

"Brittle Bones, Plastic Skin", what if you could change history, time itself? Frank Macintosh wishes he could do so. He remembers his wife and their three-year-old son, Topher. He still hears the pitter-patter of his little feet around the house. Despite Frank's loss, there is something about the house and the tree that shares its soil that haunts him. Not a day goes by that the tree taunts him, reminds him. Will it be too late for Frank when his research of the house's history reveals a horror even his frayed mind can't comprehend?

Riley truly takes the reader's hand and holds it tight through moments where his skill to eviscerate our imagination intersect with the harsh reality of what, we, ourselves are capable of. Each story that comprises this collection hits every note on the emotional and creative scale in an eerie, relatable way. Written with a strong and enthralling voice, The Monster Within Idea gives us originality and imagination instead of clichés--a collection that clearly stands apart from the rest.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars The good stories are really good. March 3, 2009
Format:Paperback
I am of two minds about this anthology, "The Monster Within Idea," edited by R. Thomas Riley, from Apex Publications. On one hand, I really liked it. On the other hand, it really frustrated me. The good stories, like "Touching God," "Jenny," "Haven," "The Run," "Bubo" and "Brittle Bones, Plastic Skin" are really excellent stories. Creepy, visceral and evocative stories than make you grin while your skin puckers in goose bumps. They lead you to the edge of the precipice and then drop you over to a satisfying conclusion--be it a sudden crash at the end or the revelation of wings.

The other stories are not bad stories. Far from it and that is why I am frustrated. I believe this is a stylistic choice by the editor (who does a good job putting the stories together in a way that makes them flow), but many of the stories seemed to be chapters 4 through 6 of an eight chapter story. They don't have satisfying conclusions. They are well written, draw you in and then leave you hanging. The most frustrating of these stories is the first story of the book, "Attrition." It stops too soon. I want to know if the protagonist makes into and through the tunnel. I want to know what he goes through. Instead, I am left with knowing he is going to go through it but not knowing if he makes it or not.

I give this anthology a 3 out of 5 because the strong stories are enough to pull the reader through the stories that stop too soon. There is no bad writing in this anthology. Just a few too-short stories mixed amongst the gems.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Review and Interview June 8, 2011
Format:Paperback
I enjoyed the collection. The stories deliver punch after punch. That is, until the reader is served a halting silence in some deep part of a grieving man's soul, locked inside a thought, and then eventually chased through an enchanted swamp pursued by who-knows-what. I can't blame a particular story for the nightmares I had while reading. I freely admit a couple of the stories managed to linger, haunting my days. I can hang with jumping right into the thick of things and a well-executed open ending thrills me. What I loved perhaps best about the collection was that while various themes were explored maybe even more than once, the stories stood out individually.

I knew Riley put much of himself into this work. I wanted to find out how he managed to bleed himself out over the pages. I needed to know if it was difficult or easy. I wanted to know if he discovered or destroyed his own boundaries in the process. I hope you enjoy the interview. If you've read the collection, I'd love to know what you thought about it.

I have an interview with R. Thomas Riley up at Apex.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars The Monster Within Idea - review
This book is a group of "Over the edge" suspenseful stories. It will keep you on edge as you read it. I just wish the stories were longer.
Published 1 month ago by Sherry B. Scruggs
4.0 out of 5 stars Engaging
A very nice collection of short stories, guaranteed to make you think. You just might want to be careful reading it late at nite!
Published 3 months ago by Otey Walker
1.0 out of 5 stars Waste of time
Glad I didn't pay for this. Total waste of time. Seems to be a collection of really amatuer, badly written stories.
Published 3 months ago by Snow Bunny
4.0 out of 5 stars Refreshing
With all the "lovey" books going around right now, it was refreshing to read about something different. A great read.
Published 3 months ago by Olympia
4.0 out of 5 stars Great short stories!
If you like strange stories with a twist...you will like this book. It was worth my time and I think it you will find it is worthy of your time, as well.
Published 3 months ago by Divadi
2.0 out of 5 stars Weird
Not my cup of tea. Seemed too disjointed for me.
Just not very fond of this genre. I like Steven King better.
Published 3 months ago by Alice Duplecion
1.0 out of 5 stars Monster
Didn't like this book at all. Did not make any sense in the beginning so I did not read it.
Published 4 months ago by Janice Miller
2.0 out of 5 stars Monsters
K thought it was broken in the beginning and horrible at the end. I will never read this again. But so.some who wasn't as girly as me would love to read this.
Published 4 months ago by kati abrahamson
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read!
Very good, couldn't stop reading! Every story had its own feel and was different from the next. It keeps you interested.
Published 4 months ago by Maribel Guerrero
4.0 out of 5 stars There Are No Atrocious Stories.
An anthology of horror / evil tales, much as most anthologies go there are the standout, captivating and unique tales while also co-existing with those that are par. Read more
Published 8 months ago by M. DeKalb
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More About the Author

R. Thomas Riley is the author of the short story collection THE MONSTER WITHIN IDEA (2009-2011) published by Hugo Nominated Apex Publications and re-released as a Kindle exclusive in 2011 and on January 14, 2013, the collection reached the Top 100 Paid Bestseller list in the Horror category. To date, the collection has been downloaded nearly 70,000 times on Kindle.

IF GOD DOESN'T SHOW - A Gibson Blount Novel (co-written with John Grover) was published by Permuted Press and Audible.com August, 2012. THE FLESH OF FALLEN ANGELS - A Gibson Blount Novella (co-written with Roy C. Booth) was published by Grand Mal Press in February, 2012. DIAPHANOUS (co-written with Roy C. Booth) is available now on Kindle. OF FLESH AND SKIN: A DARKER EROTIC COLLECTION (co-written with Lisa McCarthy) was released March 2013. THE DAY LUFBERRY WON IT ALL was adapted to short film by Frosty Moon Omnimedia in 2010.





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