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Editor: Richard Chizmar
Artist: Gail Cross
Page Count: 314
Pub. Date: May 2006
ISBN: 1-58767-129-8
Rating:     (Rate It!)
Status: In-Stock
About This Title:
Shivers IV
edited by Richard Chizmar
Trade Paperback: $20
Cemetery Dance Publications is proud to announce the fourth entry in this award
nominated and bestselling anthology series! Shivers IV contains over
twenty short stories from today's hottest writers, including William F. Nolan,
Ed Gorman, Brian Hodge, Tim Lebbon, Al Sarrantonio, Ray Garton, T.M. Wright,
Brian Keene, Kealan Patrick Burke, and many others! Featuring original dark
fiction with a handful of rare reprints, Shivers IV is available only
as a beautiful perfect-bound trade paperback!
Table of Contents:
"Prohibited" by Kealan Patrick Burke
"Last Exit For The Lost" by Tim Lebbon
"The Screamers at the Window" by T.M. Wright
"The Man in the Palace Theater" by Ray Garton
"Pumpkin-Witch" by Tim Curran
"LZ-116: Das Fliegenschloss" by Stephen Mark Rainey
"Something to Be Said For the Waiting" by Brian Freeman
"Jack-Knife" by Gemma Files
"The Spook" by Randy Chandler
"Ever After" by John R. Little
"The Bittersweet Deafening Sound of Nothing at All" by Robert Morrish
"Up in the Boneyard" by Keith Minnion
"Mom and Dad At Home" by Ed Gorman
"Should Old Acquaintance Be Forgot" by Bill Walker
"In the Best Stories" by Norman Prentiss
"Poetic Justice" by William F. Nolan
"Dust" by Brian Keene
"The Deer of St. Bart's" by Bev Vincent
"The Man in the Other Car" by Al Sarrantonio
"Liturgical Music For Nihilists" a novella by Brian Hodge
Reviews:
"The dedicated publisher of Cemetery Dance, the leading magazine
in the horror field, assembles 20 original stories by writers old and new for
this fourth incarnation of his dependable Shivers series. As with previous
volumes, no single theme predominates, though many stories strive for the ambiguous
supernaturalism of the Twilight Zone-school of writing. Randy Chandler's
"The Spook" tells of a soldier whose discovery that Arab fighters
are beings from hell may be a case of demonizing the enemy taken to a psychotic
extreme. Al Sarrantonio offers a premonitory fantasy of horrors that lurk just
up around the bend for a dysfunctional family on a stressful road trip in "The
Man in the Other Car." Few of horror's traditional monsters are on display,
though Stephen Mark Rainey's "LZ-116: Das Flegenschloss," about the
beings that the Germans were actually targeting in their WWII bombing runs,
comes closest." —Publishers Weekly
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    Must have addition to your collection!
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03/13/2006 - by Paul Little from Dallas, GA US
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Just finished reading Shivers IV and I have to say it is every bit as good as the previous books in the series, if not better! The best names in horror today contained in one volume that is sure to cause some sleepless nights!
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