Philip Athans’s Reviews > Dark Tales > Status Update

Philip Athans
is on page 61 of 208
“The Story We Used to Tell” felt rushed and incomplete, as though it was more an idea for a novel than a fully realized story.
— Mar 25, 2025 01:06PM
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Philip Athans
is on page 171 of 208
In the story “Home,” a line that, for me, screams Shirley Jackson:
Ethel Sloane had no intention of antagonizing the villagers by hiring an unpopular plumber.
— Apr 29, 2025 10:53AM
Ethel Sloane had no intention of antagonizing the villagers by hiring an unpopular plumber.

Philip Athans
is on page 171 of 208
In "The Man in the Woods" is Phyllis Pasiphae?
This whole anthology seems to share a theme: the terror of the inevitability of hearth and home--or the terror of seeing that closed off, as though a family (in or outside of a house) is a prison not only no one can escape from but that no one can help walk themselves into.
— Apr 28, 2025 04:35PM
This whole anthology seems to share a theme: the terror of the inevitability of hearth and home--or the terror of seeing that closed off, as though a family (in or outside of a house) is a prison not only no one can escape from but that no one can help walk themselves into.

Philip Athans
is on page 158 of 208
I’ll admit I had a little trouble connecting with “The Good Wife,” but that may be because I read it on Monday morning with a lot of work distractions buzzing around my head.
— Apr 28, 2025 07:41AM

Philip Athans
is on page 150 of 208
The first line of the story “A Visit” echoes Shirley Jackson's opening paragraph to The Haunting of Hill House, which us the greatest opening paragraph in the history of literature:
The house in itself was, even before anything happened there, as lovely a thing as she had ever seen.
— Apr 26, 2025 04:49PM
The house in itself was, even before anything happened there, as lovely a thing as she had ever seen.

Philip Athans
is on page 126 of 208
“Family Treasures” is a fun taste of “dark academia.”
— Apr 25, 2025 01:58PM

Philip Athans
is on page 112 of 208
The Bus" perfectly encapsulates the loneliness, frustration, and futility of aging.
— Apr 25, 2025 09:11AM

Philip Athans
is on page 98 of 208
"What a Thought"
An odd thought crossed her mind: she would pick up the heavy glass ashtray and smash her husband over the head with it.
— Apr 25, 2025 08:38AM
An odd thought crossed her mind: she would pick up the heavy glass ashtray and smash her husband over the head with it.

Philip Athans
is on page 94 of 208
“All She Said Was Yes” is the greatest example of gallows humor I’ve ever read. Delightfully creepy.
— Apr 17, 2025 03:38PM