Horror, in many ways, is about acceptance. Coming to grips with who and what we are. Horror is a way to explore identity.
In Diet Riot, Nico Bell and Sonora Taylor have given us just that: a way to reclaim fatness and body positivity. For too long, fat people are vilified in horror and in fiction in general. Fatness is used as a signifier of decayed morals, of avarice, of gluttony, or of buffoonery. In the pages of Diet Riot, this is wholly upended.
This is an anthology that wars body positivity with pride. IT is a reminder to each and every person who ever felt isolated, that they belong. Stephanie Rabig kicks off with "Cinderella and her Demon Godmother," a delightfully vengeful story of a demon wreaking vengeance on those who use the internet for cruelty. there's a reminder human beings only live so long- who would choose to be cruel?
Nico Bell's "The Lake House" is another standout. A queer horror story of Lauren and Erin, a married couple reaching tensions in their union, with Lauren's fad diets costing them a great deal. At the lake house, Erin thinks she sees a monster...and one that might provide a way to deal with a cheating, fatphobic wife short of divorce. A delightfully macabre little revenge story where Erin has a way to deal with any problems that arrive.
Roxie Voorhes' Neon Afterglow is set during the aids crisis. It's a chilling story of how easy it is to dehumanize innocent people; gay, fat. Voorhes' writing is tight, smart and one of the most emotional in the book.
Christi Nogle's "Waterfall" is another winner, followed by the equally great "Red Dot In the Window." Each story is lovingly curated from a variety of genres, but all with sympathy towards their protagonists and showing them as interesting, human characters.
Rounding out the antho are Nikki R. Leigh's "The Floor Is Lava," a beautifully constructed tale of life, love and peril. And Sonora Taylor's "Easy Bake."
Few can write with Sonora's skill. She blends horror, the grotesque, and a careful sense of irony and eroticism. On Easy Bake...there's a competition afoot, for cooking, and people are being eliminated. And the losers donate more than they expect to the game. The question is how the ladies, Crystal and Ming, fight back.
And oh, DO THEY.
There's horror to be sure, but it's never at the expense of fat people. It's a great anthology, and we need more body positivity horror.