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The Atrocities Paperback – April 17, 2018
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Jeremy Shipp brings you THE ATROCITIES, a haunting gothic fantasy of a young ghost's education
When Isabella died, her parents were determined to ensure her education wouldn't suffer.
But Isabella's parents had not informed her new governess of Isabella's... condition, and when Ms Valdez arrives at the estate, having forced herself through a surreal nightmare maze of twisted human-like statues, she discovers that there is no girl to tutor.
Or is there...?
- Print length112 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateApril 17, 2018
- Dimensions5 x 0.26 x 8 inches
- ISBN-101250164397
- ISBN-13978-1250164391
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Praise for The Atrocities
"This beautifully executed tale . . . will surely linger with readers."―Publishers Weekly
Praise for Jeremy Shipp
“Shipp’s clear, insistent voice pulls you down into the rabbit hole and doesn’t let go.” ―Jack Ketchum
“Jeremy C. Shipp’s boldness, daring, originality, and sheer smarts make them one of the most vital younger writers who have colonized horror literature in the past decade. Shipp’s modernist clarity, plus their willingness to risk damn near everything, put them up at the head of the pack with the very best.” ―Peter Straub
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Tordotcom (April 17, 2018)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 112 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1250164397
- ISBN-13 : 978-1250164391
- Item Weight : 4.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 5 x 0.26 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,013,875 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3,093 in Gothic Fiction
- #9,745 in Dark Fantasy
- #17,757 in Romantic Fantasy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jeremy C. Shipp is the Bram Stoker and Shirley Jackson Award-nominated author of The Atrocities, Bedfellow, and Cursed. Their shorter tales have appeared in over 60 publications, including Cemetery Dance, Dark Moon Digest and Apex Magazine. Jeremy lives in Southern California in a moderately haunted Farmhouse. Their twitter handle is @JeremyCShipp.
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I was hooked from the first two sentences:
‘Turn left at the screaming woman with a collapsing face. Turn right at the kneeling man with bleeding sore the size of teacups.’
What a wonderful hedge maze! What an amazing house, with its artwork of silent screams, wings of human fingers, headless figures on stained-glass windows, faces distorted and malformed.
What an intriguing story! A governess who is hired to teach a young girl who “isn’t coping well with this new phase of her existence.” A governess who comes with her own baggage.
‘I came to this house to escape empty rooms.’
A generous employer who ensures their employees’ comfort with luxuries including eighty-four-inch high definition televisions in their rooms. Parents who catered to their daughter’s every whim.
There was such a foreboding atmosphere permeating this novella. There’s something not quite right with the characters and with the information the governess is given. There’s a sort of queasy uncertainty throughout the story, where the line between what’s real and what isn’t blurs for the governess and the reader alike, exacerbated by the unsettling dream sequences.
I was captivated by this story until the very end when I realised that not one of my bazillion outstanding questions were going to be answered for me. I know there are authors that don’t like to spoon feed their readers, preferring them to actually use their brain and imagination to reach their own conclusions, and I’m okay with that up to a point. This didn’t feel like that sort of ending. This felt like there was a strict deadline and about ten minutes before the deadline, realising that there was no way all of the questions could possibly be answered satisfactorily, the author just said, “Yeah, that’ll do.”
I wanted to learn more of the backstories for each character. I wanted more emotion when outrageously weird things happened rather than a ho-hum response. I wanted to know minor, possibly insignificant things like why Mr and Mrs Evers shouldn’t be phoned after 7pm. I wanted to know the details of the ‘accident’. I wanted to know what it was that Mrs Evers was really experiencing throughout the story. I wanted to know the significance of some of the details of the dreams. I want to know which characters are currently alive. I wanted to know what happened after the final sentence! And so much more.
I can’t remember the last book that had me so psyched and then stole the hope of a satisfying resolution from me. Based on the ending alone I’d be giving this novella 2 stars because I was so disappointed. Based on everything that lead up to it I’d be inclined to give it 5 stars but that was when I thought the questions I had would wind up with weird and wonderful answers. So I’m splitting the difference and rounding up to 4 stars with the hope that at some point the author will do a Q&A session to fill in some blanks. I came really close to giving it 3 stars but I loved too much of the story to able to go through with it.
I also have to say that the creepy hedge maze and that amazing house were so extraordinary that I need to move in immediately (after evicting the current tenants, of course). I would also buy and read an extended version of this story if it ever became available and I am keen to read about more of the weird and wonderful things living in this author’s imagination.
This is a novella at just a smidge over 100 pages, which if you know me was not in it's favor from the first page. I'm not often a fan of the novella, as they are rarely long enough for an author to really flesh out a story, let alone character development. I did not for one second even think about the length of this from the first page. It was a full on story, and I felt the characters, moved with them, was afraid for them. Novella or not, very well done.
As seems to be the usual with Shipp, he has expanded my vocabulary, and entertained me with lines like: "He glanced at me with the expressionless eyes of a supermarket cashier."
Dark and creepy and warped with all sorts of plot twists until you don't know which way is up. That was my experience with Vacation as well. Shipp did not disappoint with The Atrocities.
If I had to give some negative, simply to justify the 4* rather than 5, I would say the end. It left me with a lot of questions that I don't want to voice here, because it would be super spoilers. This is the kind of story you don't want spoilered. Trust me. I have some theories about my questions, but it's definitely not answered. Feels like a plot hole, or just something that wouldn't be easy to make clear in such a concise telling. Shipp has a minimalist style though that really works for him, so I don't want to mess with the art. I just felt like there was a little something missing at the end, or maybe the end happened a little too quickly for me? That might be one really subjective star.
If you like dark and creepy and twisty turny, this is the book for you.
While the story has a similar starting premise to, say, The Haunting of Bly Manor, this is not a soft psychological horror. Everything is in your face, and be warned, there is a lot of body horror. I was captivated from first word until last. And it's a quick read - I finished it in a little over an hour.
However, the finale of the novella does feel too painfully open ended and rushed. Horror does well to leave many questions unanswered, but it feels like the novella spends most of its pages to build up a suspense only to swiftly resolve things at the end. It's jarring: on one hand, I had many questions left unanswered and to ponder and fill in the gaps with my own imagination. On the other hand, I felt like some of the plot elements were grossly unaddressed, and the nice little bow at the end felt like a falsity. This, of course, may have been Shipp's intent, but I didn't enjoy it.
That said this is a great sample of what Shipp can do when writing horror, and I still heartily recommend it to any horror fans.
Top reviews from other countries
The details are gruesome, and the story weaves seamlessly between waking and dreaming, and where it's not always clear what's what, it's clearly intended.
This story is a great companion for a rainy afternoon.
The overall low rating put me off of buying it for a few months but I decided to bite the bullet today and I'm mad at myself for letting low average ratings stop me from reading good fiction.
I was put off by the first person present tense narration at first, but stopped noticing it at some point and realize it 100% fits with the plot, and I'm glad the author went with it.
An A+ afternoon read, I recommend it!
P.S. The fact that so many people wrote their reviews as if they're scripts for a Plotholes in Movies videos really really annoyed me. Y'all are reading gothic/weird fiction but somehow can't manage to suspend disbelief for an hour?!??? Maybe go read another genre, seriously, what are you even doing here.





