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The Gulp
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The Gulp by Alan Baxter - Aug. 3
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Alan
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rated it 4 stars
Jul 31, 2021 07:43AM

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I have only read The Roo by Baxter and that one was sort of tongue-in-cheek really, so I'm genuinely impressed by Baxter writing serious horror. I'll do my best to keep up and finish swiftly.
I may not start until tomorrow, so don't rush yourself to get through it. But don't hold back on my account either.
Read it...but don't read it!!! :P
Read it...but don't read it!!! :P
Finished the first story. Definitely more solid straight up horror than The Roo. Kind had an Innsmouth vibe, and more old-school kind of small town terror going on.

Haha, alright, I can do that.
I'll just drop my opinions here as I finish the stories.
Just finished "Mother in Bloom". That was so much like an old school Creepshow kind of story. And I couldn't help but think of:

After "The Band Played On" (Plays?) I need a brief break from the book. There was no subtlety about it. It was clear where the plot was going from the early stages of the story, and having that dread hanging over you like the Sword of Damocles until the inevitable conclusion nearly 50 pages later was really tense on the nerves.

"
Yeah Mother of Bloom was OK, but the weakest for me so far. Although I really love the trope funghi in horror and really enjoy the revival in especially movies, that's how I fell about this story. The end was too ambiguous too. Every time there is, like, a mushroom or slime or any kind of substance that keeps on swallowing things I think about that King story where that green thing from outer space keeps expanding and expanding - I forget the title of that story but it was one of the short films in Creepshow too, as you rightly pointed out the similarity. I like that Baxter turns that upside down here, the mushroom isn't expanding at tall, it grows back, if that ever makes sense. It's a nice twist.

Yeah, I see what you mean, this one was quite something, wasnt it? Having read the first story, it was clear that strangers are doomed and in the end they actually got away better than I would have thought. I was expecting real carnage.
(view spoiler)
I'm happy to be reading this book, really enjoying it so far.
This book is a lot like Josh Malerman's Goblin. The stories are stand alone, but have recurring elements and each explores another corner of Gulpepper. Kind of like when a rock band does a concept album.
My fave pop-up in every story - Have you seen Daniel?
My fave pop-up in every story - Have you seen Daniel?

And I didn't read Goblin but will add it to my TBR now, I like the storytelling style.
"48 to Go" As Dace is passing the beach he sees four people - "An old man, a middle-aged man and woman, and a young girl....Strange bunch to be there so late at night..."

Soooo "48 to Go" was the usual trope, ne'er do well gets in big trouble with his "boss", takes desperate measures to get righteous again, runs into horror shit he never could have imagined. But it didn't go the way I expected. Verrrrry interrrrresting...
OK, finished. "Rock Fisher"....that was some cosmic horror, I tell you what. Not the ending (?) I was expecting at all.

(view spoiler) Baxter could have written a whole book on the events of this story.
One more to go for me.

Thank you for the buddy read, this book was awesome!
Yeah, the end was a nice tie up and at the same time open door for a sequel. If there are further adventures in The Gulp, we're there.

Have you read it already? If not, would you be up to buddy reading some time in May?