Left Hand Tree: Stories of Spiritual Horror by Jay Gunter
Published by October House Publishing
Ebook
Published 19 January 2017
405 pages
Review copy
In these pages you will encounter strange stories of otherworldly evil, sent from a place eerily familiar, yet utterly bizarre, to deliver a stealthy sense of disquiet that will haunt your dreams.
LEFT HAND TREETales like the title story, where an infant awaits a monstrous fate, and whose only salvation is a man with an ocean of blood on his hands.
LEFT HAND TREETales like, "The Fourth Son of Adam," where a sceptical reporter makes a pilgrimage of dark discovery that will threaten to poison his soul, his sanity . . . and even extinguish his humanity.
LEFT HAND TREETales like "Triptych", where a maestro of evil is haunted by an unthinkable revenant intent on delivering him to an unimaginable confrontation.
"THE DEAD ONES DANCING ROUND THE LEFT HAND TREE . . ."All these and more you will discover when you read these pages and enter their world of horror and strangeness.
Come, if you dare, and be changed . . . perhaps forever . . .
OPENINGFrom Left Hand Tree
In his dream, the baby's mother came to him and bent over him, smiling.
WHAT I THOUGHTYou know that moment when you discover a new author and you fall completely in love with their words and characters and the dark and twisted little world's they create? I'm going through that just now after reading Left Hand Tree which is essentially a novella and some short stories. It's been a long time, too long since I read horror fiction this bloody good. The novella, Left Hand Tree is one of the best pieces of horror fiction I've read in ages. I found it creepy and so unsettling my flesh literally crawled off my bones and hid in the corner. Unlike a lot of horror fiction, this collection doesn't contain any blood and gore. It's just so unsettling and creepy. The stories and style of writing remind me of John Connolly's Charlie Parker novels with a dash of Clive Barker and a pinch of HP Lovecraft thrown in for good measure. Who can resist such a combination? Not me, that's for certain. I loved how all of the tales were linked in some way by the same ideas and themes. I loved each tale in the collection but Left Hand Tree and Flowers hold a special place in my heart. I'd highly recommend this collection.
I'm thirty-five years old and live in Glasgow in the UK with my partner of ten years. I work in a support team for a call centre. I like reading especially Joyce Carol Oates and Stephen King. I write fiction and poetry. I enjoy watching TV (Grimm, Torchwood, Doctor Who, Lip Service, The L Word etc). I like to play video games and am a fan of survival horror especially the Silent Hill franchise. I like to watch movies especially horror and anything where someone dies. View all posts by pamelascott30