I picked this book up completely at random in an effort to claw my way out of a really bad slump. I can happily say that for the first time in my life I enjoyed a short story collection! Most of the stories were really good, and I liked that so many of them leaned into horror.
An Invitation to a Burning by Kat Howard (2 stars): I didn't vibe with the writing and the whole thing felt pointless. It's been like a day and I've already forgotten most of what happened.
Widow's Walk by Angela Slatter (2.5 stars): Interesting idea, but it would have worked better with fewer characters, because I couldn't keep track of everyone and they didn't really serve much of a purpose. I enjoyed the thematic aspect of it but it felt a bit shallow too.
Black Magic Momma by Kelley Armstrong (4 stars): Apparently this is part of the author's published series, which explains why I felt like I needed context on some of the worldbuilding, but this was really fun! The narration was strong and voicey and the story itself was fast-paced and interesting.
The Night Nurse by Sarah Langan (4 stars): A bit too long for what it was, but I think that was purposeful in order to slowly build up the creeping sense of dread. This was very creepy, but the ending was abrupt and I definitely wanted more closure.
The Memories of Trees by Mary SanGiovanni (3 stars): This was a weird one, set in a dystopian world but written like it was set in the 17th-century, which was more jarring than anything. The dystopian setting felt like it served no purpose, and I kind of wish this had just been set in the past, because I really loved the idea of it, and the conclusion, but the dystopian worldbuilding was weird and incomplete and really just dragged down the story.
Home: A Morganville Vampires Story by Rachel Caine (4.5 stars): Wow, this was so much fun! Not surprising, considering it featured witches andvampires, but it also takes place within an already established world, so I was worried I'd feel lost, but no, it was perfectly understandable. Very, very fast-paced, with some great lore; I found myself wanting to know way more about the vampires and witches of this world. It's not 5 stars only because I didn't care much for the human characters, who were very bland, but the vamps were excellent.
The Deer Wife by Jennifer McMahon (3 stars): This was a very bleak one, felt a lot like a fairytale. I liked the idea of it, but something about the execution left me cold. I just couldn't connect with the main character in a meaningful way, but it definitely had some great vibes.
The Dancer by Kristin Dearborn (2.5 stars): This didn't make sense to me at all. It was about people with powers and a toxic family relationship but neither of those elements were fully explored. Plus the narration was weird and stiff.
Bless Your Heart by Hillary Monahan (4 stars): Loved how voicey this one was! The narrator is very Southern and very sassy and has lots of personality, so her gruesome tale of getting revenge for her son was very fun to follow.
The Debt by Ania Ahlborn (3 stars): I really loved the idea behind this (a tale of betrayal inspired by Baba Yaga), but I wasn't a fan of the execution. While there were some elements that had some real horror and dread behind them, overall the story was too slow-paced and there just wasn't enough closure.
Toil & Trouble: A Dark-Hunter Hellchaser Story by Sherrilyn Kenyon & Madaug Kenyon (2 stars): I have no idea what this was meant to be? I didn't get it at all, and it felt at once too slow and too fast. The main character's decisions made no sense and happened like whiplash. And then the ending was super confusing; I felt like it was meant to be a twist but I think I was missing the context to make it hit home.
Last Stop On Route Nine by Tananarive Due (4.5 stars): I've always wanted to read something by this author and this did not disappoint! It felt like a full-on horror movie in the vein of Get Out. It deftly interwove horror of the supernatural with the real-life everyday horror black people encounter due to systemic racism, and managed to make both equally terrifying. Absolutely excellent.
Where Relics Go To Dream and Die by Rachel Autumn Deering (4.5 stars): Not sure I entirely understood this, but I loved it anyway. It was written very elegantly and in an old-fashioned way, and it was suuuuuuper gory, with tiny hints of cosmic horror. I feel like this could easily be a world of its own; I would love to see this expanded into a full on fantasy story.
This Skin by Amber Benson (3.5 stars): This featured a creepy child and had an ambiguous, open ending. I liked the twist at the end but mainly I felt like I wanted more from this.
Haint Me Too by Chesya Burke (3.5 stars): Yet another story that interwove the mundane horror of being black with the supernatural. It was voicey and well-written and I loved its spin on what a witch is.
The Nekrolog by Helen Marshall (3 stars): I really, really wanted to like this more than I did, because I love stories inspired by Soviet Communism, and this was written in a way that was just, well, cool, but overall I thought it was far too confusing. The final part had me scratching my head. I mean, it's not that I didn't get what was going on, I did, but I just wanted more...closure? Reflection? A lot of the elements in this just didn't come together as well as they could have.
Gold Among The Black by Alma Katsu (2.5 stars): Meh. I felt nothing for this. It's about a girl and her animal companion who turns out to be a able to turn into a human, but there was no context or explanation for anything that happened.
How To Become A Witch-Queen by Theodora Goss (3 stars): I will say this was a very appropriate story to end the collection with, but I didn't enjoy this Snow White tale as much as I wanted to. I found the use of second person pointless and the story fairly predictable and unoriginal and the feminist themes heavy-handed.