Ah, Flame Tree. Just when I think I'm out, you pull me back in. But as of this review, I think I've finally read all I want to from them. I've been waiting for someone to post at least a list of the stories (got so many horror/Gothic anthologies, it's getting harder to avoid duplicates, and your girl doesn't have money/time for that). Believe it or not, although I'm an American and have affinity for Gothic literature, I have to say I'm not sure I've read much American Gothic lit. I do love Gothic novels, but American Gothic can veer into Southern Gothic, of which I've never been a huge fan (I love my brooding heroes, strong willed heroines, and gloomy castles). I suppose I'm a bit put off by the idea that all southerners talk with an exaggerated twang, and reading that twang creates a stumbling effect in me. These stories prove that horror can be find anywhere and in the most innocuous of people. Nothing is sacred: creatures stalk apartment complexes in the form of kindly neighbors, energy vampires masquerade as unsuspecting grandmas and widows from city streets to sleepy suburbia, and perhaps that's why American Gothic has a leg up on its plain Jane cousin. My stars stem from the stories I enjoyed and as always, here they are:
*"A Vine on a House"-Ambrose Bierce
*"Somnambulism: A Fragment"-Charles Brockden Brown
*"Stone Baby"-Terri Bruce
*"The Tomb Herd"-Ramsey Campbell
*"The Dark Presser"-E.E.W. Christman
*"The Dead Valley"-Ralph Adams Cram
*"Graveyard's Full"-Maxx Fidalgo
*"Luella Miller"-Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
*"The Yellow Wallpaper'-Charlotte Perkins Gilman
*"The Past"-Ellen Glasgow
*"Old Homeplace"-Joshua Hiles
*"The Story of a Day"-Grace King
*"Viola's Second Husband"-Sean Logan
*"The Outsiders in Hawthorne Tomb"-Madison McSweeney
*"Big, Bad,"-Lynette Mejia
*"Gothic American"-Joe Nazare
*"In the Bleak"-Wendy Nikel
*"Baby Teeth"-Lina Rather
*"Approaching Lavender"-Lucy A. Snyder
*"The Hollow Tree"-Nemma Wollenfang