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Book: “Strange New Moons” by Stephen Kozeniewski (Ed.) & Kayleigh Dobbs (Ed.)
Publishing Info: French Press Publishing, January 2025
Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eARC from the publisher.
Where You Can Get This Book: Amazon
Book Description: You can hardly swing a dismembered deer carcass these days without hitting a “No vampires, no zombies, and no werewolves” sign on an anthology.
Well, to that we say “Pshaw!” And also, “Awooo!”
Because what readers really don’t like are dull werewolf stories. So, we tasked the horror community with writing the weirdest, wildest, most creative, utterly bonkers tails (ha!) of lycanthropic lunacy possible.
– a brutal, boneshattering peek at the kind of “dogfights” the super-wealthy watch to amuse themselves
– a story of two inquisitive city employees trying to find out who (or what!) keeps pooping on a local landmark
– a ride along with a delusional cop trying to prevent the total werewolf apocalypse. Werepocalypse!
Plus werewolf Frankenstein! And werewolves in space! This book is all gore and no bore. With a lineup running the gamut from brand, spanking new cubs to heavyweight timber alphas, you’d have to be the weakest elk in the herd not to slobber all over…
Review: Thank you to French Press Publishing for sending me an eARC of this novel!
I’m still a little bit shocked that werewolves haven’t had a huge horror moment lately the way that vampires and zombies have. And I fully admit that I am kind of a part of that lack of werewolf moment, as I’ve never really been huge into that sub-genre of horror (though lately I’ve enjoyed books like “Such Sharp Teeth” by Rachel Harrison, and “Bride” by Ali Hazelwood, which do have werewolves and some horror elements). Hell, I didn’t even get my butt to the movie theater to see the new “Wolf Man” even though it looked pretty decent. So when I was offered the anthology “Strange New Moons”, edited by authors Kayleigh Dobbs and Stephen Kozeniewski, I was game. Bring on the lycanthropes, I said!
Like most other short story collections, I am going to showcase my favorite three stories, and then review the collection as a whole.
“Vargsången” by Mary SanGiovanni: This was the first story in the collection, and it made it so that it started with a serious bang. A woman in an isolated cabin knows that there is some kind of predator outside her door on a snowy night. She wants to keep her sleeping children safe, but doesn’t know if she should confront the beast, or just hope that it goes away. I love the Scandinavian setting and mythology choices, and thought that it was suspenseful and relatable as a mother has to decide if she should risk drawing attention to a predator outside the door. This may have been my favorite story in the collection, as a matter of fact!
“That Time of the Month” by Kayleigh Dobbs: I’ve read Kayleigh Dobbs before and have always enjoyed her stories, and this one was one of the more humorous contributions to the collection, with a wry commentary to go with the lycanthropy. Every month in a community the men lock themselves up, tucked away from the full moon lest they find themselves in a dangerous situation. But one hapless husband has found himself out on the streets on the night that he is supposed to be safely tucked away… Dobbs sets up one scenario based on what we’ve expected from werewolf tropes in past stories, but subverts it in a clever and often quite humorous way. I found myself cackling a fair amount as I read this story. Horror humor done right!
“It’s All For The Best, Sweetie” by Rose Strickman: I’m a true sucker for any kind of fairy tale retelling, especially if it’s a bit dark, so “It’s All For The Best, Sweetie” was the other story that really stood out to me. Through letters from a grandmother to a granddaughter, we find the story of a woman who has trapped her granddaughter in her home, believing her to be a dangerous animal at heart. The epistolary format was really great, and it made for a very unreliable grandmother narrator as she writes her letters to Roja, becoming more unhinged by the minute. Or is it just clarity? Such a creepy and twisted “Red Riding Hood” reimagining.
As a collection I thought that it had a lot of variety across sub-genres, which is always nice to see, with a nice mix of traditionally scary, to surrealistic, to tongue in cheek humorous. The only author I had read in this group (at least I’m fairly certain of) is Kayleigh Dobbs, and I truly enjoyed reading so many of the works in this collection from authors I was unfamiliar with. And any stories that didn’t work as well for me were more due to the sub-genres themselves (like leaning more heavily Sci-Fi, for example), and that is more a reflection on my tastes as I could see fans of said sub-genres being very happy with what they find.
So overall I’m pleased that I read “Strange New Moons”. It’s always nice to see more werewolf fiction since it hasn’t had it’s moment in the moon as much as other monster horror has, and if you do like werewolves this collection will surely satisfy!
Rating 8: A fun and varied collection of werewolf stories crossing tone and genre!
Reader’s Advisory:
“Strange New Moons” isn’t on any Goodreads lists as of now, but would fit in on “Werewolf Books”.
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