
Best New Horror 2
(The second book in the Mammoth Book of Best New Horror series)(1991)
An anthology of stories edited by
Ramsey Campbell and Stephen Jones
Publisher's Weekly
Twenty-eight spine-tinglers are showcased by the editors, both veteran horror writers,in this fine anthology, which runs the horror gamut from occult shocker to psychological thriller. Though it opens with a rather tasteless entry, K. W. Jeter's grisly ``The First Time'' (told with au courant splatterpunk brio), the collection redeems itself many times over with a score of tales that make the prerequisite suspension of disbelief a hair-raising pleasure. In Michael Marshall Smith's imaginative ``The Man Who Drew Cats,'' a mysterious street-artist stretches his creativity to alarmingly grim lengths when an abused child wins his heart. Thomas Ligotti's fluently written novella, ``The Last Feast of Harlequin,'' reveals the dark nature lurking just beneath the whiteface. The searing final image in ``Cedar Lane,'' by Karl Edward Wagner, will invoke for many genre fans Ray Bradbury's classic ``There Will Come Soft Rains.'' J. L. Comeau's riveting ``Firebird'' pits supernatural forces against a feisty ballerina who also happens to be a cop. In one of the collection's strongest entries, ``Mister Ice Cold,'' cartoonist Gahan Wilson proves that a few thousand well-chosen words just might be worth more than a picture, after all.
Twenty-eight spine-tinglers are showcased by the editors, both veteran horror writers,in this fine anthology, which runs the horror gamut from occult shocker to psychological thriller. Though it opens with a rather tasteless entry, K. W. Jeter's grisly ``The First Time'' (told with au courant splatterpunk brio), the collection redeems itself many times over with a score of tales that make the prerequisite suspension of disbelief a hair-raising pleasure. In Michael Marshall Smith's imaginative ``The Man Who Drew Cats,'' a mysterious street-artist stretches his creativity to alarmingly grim lengths when an abused child wins his heart. Thomas Ligotti's fluently written novella, ``The Last Feast of Harlequin,'' reveals the dark nature lurking just beneath the whiteface. The searing final image in ``Cedar Lane,'' by Karl Edward Wagner, will invoke for many genre fans Ray Bradbury's classic ``There Will Come Soft Rains.'' J. L. Comeau's riveting ``Firebird'' pits supernatural forces against a feisty ballerina who also happens to be a cop. In one of the collection's strongest entries, ``Mister Ice Cold,'' cartoonist Gahan Wilson proves that a few thousand well-chosen words just might be worth more than a picture, after all.
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Used availability for Ramsey Campbell's Best New Horror 2
See all available used copies of this book at: Abebooks UK or Abebooks US
Hardback Editions
November 1991 : Hardback
| Title: Best New Horror 2 Author(s): Stephen Jones ISBN: 0-88184-736-4 / 978-0-88184-736-9 (USA edition) Publisher: Carroll & Graf Pub Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
Paperback Editions
February 1993 : Paperback
| Title: Best New Horror 2 Author(s): Stephen Jones ISBN: 0-88184-921-9 / 978-0-88184-921-9 (USA edition) Publisher: Carroll & Graf Pub Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
August 1991 : Paperback
| Title: Best New Horror: No. 2 (Best New) Author(s): ISBN: 1-85487-094-7 / 9781854870940 (UK edition) Publisher: Robinson Publishing Availability: Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
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