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Dark Love

Dark Love

Introduction by T. E. D. Klein. Includes Stephen King story: "Lunch at the Gotham Cafe."

From Publishers Weekly

Love and death have been twinned in the horror genre ever since Poe imagined bedding his young bride in her sepulcher by the sea. Recently, several anthologies, spearheaded by Hot Blood (1989) and its sequels, have capitalized on horror fans' taste for the eros in thanatos. Dark Love may be the strongest such book yet. The first of its 22 original tales is a raucous Stephen King entry, "Lunch at the Golden Cafe," which takes a blood-smeared butcher blade to the notion of romantic love. Similarly subversive are Richard Laymon's "The Maiden," a gleefully nasty riff on adolescent lust, and Ed Gorman's "The End of It All," in which a man's reunion with his teenage crush inspires enough plot twists to fill a novel. Not all of the stories here work well. Some, like those by David J. Schow and Ramsey Campbell, are accomplished tales but seem to have only a tangential relation to the book's theme; then there's "Locked Away," by Karl Edward Wagner, which isn't much more than a parade of pornographic images. By contrast, two of the three best stories here?Kathe Koja's "Pas de Deux" and John Peyton Cooke's daring "The Penitent" (which explores the netherland of pain and domination)?use graphic detail for provocation rather than titillation. The book's final story, Douglas Winter's "Loop," about one man's obsession with a porno star, does the same, offering an insidiously seductive conclusion to one of the finest horror collections of the year. Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

The link between horror (or dark fantasy, as those who want to endow it with greater respectability call it) and eroticism seems to grow stronger every year and with each anthology of erotic horror that, like this one, showcases high-quality stories. Oh, they do go in for a certain amount of kinky detail, but the real emphasis here is on the psychological horror that can arise when relationships, natural or otherwise, go sour. Distinguished contributions come from Stephen King, Ramsey Campbell, Douglas Winter, Robert Weinberg, Kathryn Ptacek, and Lucy Taylor, and even stories that do not break new ground (in what is already a heavily populated graveyard) are eminently readable. If you want erotic horror (as opposed to horrible eroticism), this collection puts out, so to speak. Roland Green

About the Author

Martin H. Greenberg���was honored in 1995 by the Mystery Writers of America with the Ellery Queen Award for lifetime achievement in mystery editing. He is also the recipient of two Anthony awards. Mystery Scene magazine called him "the best mystery anthologist since Ellery Queen." He has compiled more than 1,000 anthologies and���is the president of TEKNO books.���He lives in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

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