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Full throttle : stories  Cover Image Book Book

Full throttle : stories

Hill, Joe (author.).

Summary: "In this masterful collection of short fiction, Joe Hill dissects timeless human struggles in thirteen relentless tales of supernatural suspense, including "In The Tall Grass," one of two stories co-written with Stephen King, basis for the terrifying feature film from Netflix. A little door that opens to a world of fairy tale wonders becomes the blood-drenched stomping ground for a gang of hunters in "Faun." A grief-stricken librarian climbs behind the wheel of an antique Bookmobile to deliver fresh reads to the dead in "Late Returns." In "By the Silver Water of Lake Champlain," two young friends stumble on the corpse of a plesiosaur at the water's edge, a discovery that forces them to confront the inescapable truth of their own mortality. and other horrors that lurk in the water's shivery depths. And tension shimmers in the sweltering heat of the Nevada desert as a faceless trucker finds himself caught in a sinister dance with a tribe of motorcycle outlaws in "Throttle," co-written with Stephen King. Featuring two previously unpublished stories, and a brace of shocking chillers, Full Throttle is a darkly imagined odyssey through the complexities of the human psyche. Hypnotic and disquieting, it mines our tormented secrets, hidden vulnerabilities, and basest fears, and demonstrates this exceptional talent at his very best"--

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780062200679
  • Physical Description: print
    regular print
    480 pages ; 24 cm.
  • Publisher: New York, New York : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, [2019]
Genre: Horror fiction.
Short stories.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at BC Interlibrary Connect.
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Sechelt/Gibsons. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Sechelt Public Library. (Show)

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Sechelt Public Library F HILL (Text) 33260100046680 Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2019 August #1
    *Starred Review* Hill returns to short stories (after the novella collection Strange Weather, 2017), where his terrifying genius most brightly shines. The stories that follow the heartfelt introduction, most of which were first printed elsewhere, including one previously only available on LP, incorporate tropes of psychological suspense, science fiction, dark fantasy, and of course horror. Every piece is driven by anxiety and unease and features Hill's trademark characters, who feel absolutely real. But it is also the sense of place that dazzles, whether it's a sinister version of Narnia in "Faun," on a coastal pier in "Dark Carousel," or on a plane as WWIII breaks out in "You Are Released." Hill lulls the reader into deep enjoyment, even as terror lies just around the corner. He rounds out this superb collection with insightful notes and a surprise fourteenth story hidden in "About the Author. The tale that will be the biggest hit with library workers and patrons is the beautiful, elegiac "Late Returns," featuring a grieving bookmobile driver who sometimes delivers books to ghosts. This is a collection of single-serve, immersive horror for fans of collections by Paul Tremblay, Stephen Graham Jones, Samanta Schewbin, and Elllen Datlow's anthologies.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Several stories, including one written with Hill's father, Stephen King, are in development for TV and Netflix, so be ready for increased demand for this already super-popular author. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2019 October
    An eight-legged monster of Halloween horror

    Get ready for a feast of frights, from gaslight romance to cosmic horror. But beware: The eight books get scarier as you read!


    The Widow of Rose House
    Diana Biller makes no bones about the fact that Edith Wharton—the best American ghost-­story writer of them all—inspired every aspect of her debut novel, The Widow of Rose House. Even the (putatively) haunted house at the heart of the story is based on Wharton's stately mansion. And best of all, Biller mirrors Wharton's genius for revealing the emotional gold lying beneath the Gilded Age, which motivates the novel's massive romantic turmoil. After years of abuse by an evil (and now deceased) husband, Alva Webster hopes to make a new start in the fashionable community of Hyde Park, New York. It's 1875, a liminal moment in American history, when the dawn of the age of electricity coincides with a mania for psychic research. These paradoxical currents merge in the heart of scientist Samuel Moore, who wants to understand nature's deepest secrets, however much darkness it takes to bring them to light. He asks Alva to let him investigate her troubled house—but the investigation goes much further than that.

    Tuesday Mooney Talks to Ghosts
    Romance takes a contemporary turn in Kate Racculia's wonderful new novel, set in present-­day Boston. The title—Tuesday Mooney Talks to Ghosts —captures both the book's dynamic spirit and its delightful ambiguity. Does heroine Tuesday Mooney really talk to ghosts? Is the ghost in question her childhood friend Abby, who disappeared when they were both 16, taken one night from the ocean wharf where she and Tuesday used to hang out together? That's the awful shadow that hangs over Tuesday's life, the memory that keeps her from true friendship and true love. But fate has other things in store, arriving in the form of an elderly, eccentric billionaire who establishes a treasure hunt in the terms of his will. It turns out that Tuesday is the one person holding all the pieces of the puzzle, which she puts together with her deliciously campy friend Dex, her precocious teenage neighbor Dorry and the secretive Archie Arches, the key to the old man's riddles and (naturally) the person made in heaven for Tuesday. As it turns out, the treasure hunt is a bid for these characters' very souls. Abby's ghost has something to say about it, too—something much more than "Boo!"

    The Saturday Night Ghost Club
    In our next novel, horror is outdone by hominess. Even the setting of Craig Davidson's The Saturday Night Ghost Club is too picturesque to be allowed: Niagara Falls in the idyllic 1980s, a place so nostalgically beautiful that nothing bad should happen there (but of course, it does). Jake is a 12-year-old boy who, along with two new summer friends, gets caught up in the magical world of his Uncle Calvin, a lovable kook who not only tells the kids ghost stories but also shows them the ghosts. One hidden card after another appears from Calvin's sleeve, until only the ace remains—the death card, the one that holds Calvin's own secret, which even he doesn't realize. If you like darkness poured out like molasses from a bucket, you'll love this novel. 

    Last Ones Left Alive
    Sarah Davis-Goff has given us a zombie novel with a Celtic twist. Remember how the folks in Riverdance used to clomp around on stage with their arms held down and motionless? In her debut novel, Last Ones Left Alive, it finally makes sense: Those creepy dancers were heralding an apocalypse of the ravenous undead, whose arms have already been bitten off. Irish zombies are called skrake, and our teenage heroine, Orpen, spends her life on a little Irish island hoping never to encounter one. But she, her Mam and their formidable friend Maeve cannot evade the menace forever. Davis-­Goff's painstaking account of the courage and resourcefulness of these three women dominates the first part of the book, but their solitary ordeal preludes a much grander unfolding of female empowerment, in which they must join forces with the banshees, a company of women who set out to defeat the skrake—and other monstrous beings—and give humanity another chance.  

    Imaginary Friend
    YA author Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower) makes his adult fiction debut with Imaginary Friend. Assuming its length (720 pages!) doesn't scare you off before you even crack the cover, I'll keep my review short, so you can get started. Chbosky's chutzpah is to reimagine the Christian story of the Madonna and Child as a horror story. Kate Reese (like Alva Webster in The Widow of Rose House) is escaping an abusive man, hoping for a fresh start with her son, Christopher, in a little Pennsylvania town called Mill Grove. But Christopher gets lost in the woods and comes back changed, haunted by a voice in his head that threatens and commands him to do strange things (or else). This "imaginary friend" cannot stay imaginary for long (well, OK, for around 500 pages). The voice's threats turn into a horrible reality, a battle between good and evil, with Mill Grove as Armageddon. 

    Suicide Woods
    Benjamin Percy's awareness of his own craft—the terms of which are generously set forth in Thrill Me, his book of essays on the art of fiction—is apparent throughout his new collection of short stories, Suicide Woods. Each tale is a creaking door, hinging on a high concept or an uncanny hook, nicely derivative of weird masters such as Edgar Allan Poe and Robert Aickman. In every case, the gears of Percy's plots make an audible noise, grinding his characters' bodies and spirits (or both) into inevitable carnage. In these unrelenting tales, it can be taken for granted that the worst will always happen—that suicidal patients will ironically be terrorized and undone by their larger fear of death; that the apparition of a "mud man" in a fellow's yard will turn his life into, well, mud; that a trip to the forbidding wilderness of Alaska will—naturally—forbid all joy, hope and life. The virtue of this collection lies in its super-refined telling, thanks to Percy's efforts to break through the barriers between genre fiction and literature, by hell and high water (and ice and mud and whatnot).

    Full Throttle
    Joe Hill's attitude toward the craft of writing could not be more different from Benjamin Percy's. Hill eats genre fiction like junk food, chewing up the whole disreputable tradition of horror into a new, unique pulp and spitting it out with massively entertaining mastery. He comes by this skill honestly: I mean, gosh, if your dad is Stephen King and your mom is Tabitha King, you're as good as doomed (read: saved). For us fans, good fortune is dealt in spades in Full Throttle, Hill's latest collection of stories. Framing a baker's dozen of tales are Hill's beautiful essay of appreciation for his parents at the front and story notes at the back, the kind that horror geeks like me drool over, just because they're so wonderfully self-indulgent. Best of all are the inclusion of two stories Hill co-authored with his father, whose famous love of motorcycles and road trips gone wrong have corrupted his son just right, making these the best tales in the collection.

    A Cosmology of Monsters
    The seven books reviewed so far go bobbing for scares, each nibbling at terrors real or imagined, each splendidly diverting in its own way. But Shaun Hamill's A Cosmology of Monsters bites horror to its core. The most influential horror writer of the 20th century is H.P. Lovecraft, whose works offer a vision of the universe as a place of irredeemable misery and meaninglessness. Our lives are ultimately in the merciless hands (and tentacles) of a pantheon of unimaginably terrifying creatures who inhabit the nether regions of the planet. The only problems are 1) Lovecraft is a notoriously overwrought prose stylist, and 2) he despised people—not just individual persons but everybody, including himself. A magnificent tribute to Lovecraft's vexing achievement, A Cosmology of Monsters redeems both of the master's flaws. Hamill's heart-stopping debut novel features exceptionally graceful language and a set of characters we come to worry about, take delight in, grieve for and love. Saturated with endless wonder and horrific consequences, it's the story of a family marked for special attention by Lovecraft's Old Ones. How much loss can a good person endure? Lovecraft never cared to ask the question. Hamill cares very much, all the way to the tragic last act. 

    Copyright 2019 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2019 August #1
    The poet laureate of everyday terrors returns with a baker's dozen of deliciously sinister tales. Novelist and short story writer Hill (Strange Weather, 2017, etc.) is, of course, the son of Stephen King, with whom he collaborates here on two stories, including the title tale. As ever with King, the stories have ordinary settings with ordinary people doing ordinary things until something extraordinary happens, in this case involving the familiar King nightmare of menacing vehicles ("Could you supercharge a goddamn semi?"). If one bears in mind that in his last collection Hill posited that near-future rainstorms would shower down steel daggers instead of water, some of his setups seem almost logical. The most memorable comes in "Late Returns," in which an out-of-work trucker (there's that semi again) finds himself behind a bookmobile delivering volumes to denizens of the afterlife, most of whom owe late fees; as one such fellow tells him, the service he offers is something of a reward "for returning overdue books in spite of the inconvenience of being dead." There are othe r benefits: In the weird chronology of the other dimension, those who are about to enter the great beyond get previews of books that haven't even been written yet—including, perhaps the most frightening moment in the entire collection, "The Art of the Presidency: How I Won My Third Term by Donald J. Trump." Hill plays with form; one story, "The Devil on the Staircase," is told in triangles of carefully arranged prose, a storyline worthy of Poe unfolding with eldritch intent—and a nice punchline to boot. In yet another story, this one of a more satirical turn, Hill depicts a world in which the zombie apocalypse and addiction to social media are hard to tell apart. In a series of tweets, the narrator recounts a zombie being hauled before a human audience and a box of hatchets. "Don't like where this is going," she says. Exactly. Miniature masterworks of modern horror proving that life is hard, weird, and always fatal. Copyright Kirkus 2019 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2019 May

    A No. 1 New York Times best-selling author with multiple film and TV adaptations to his name, Hill returns with a story collection containing some bounteous surprises. "In the Tall Grass" is the basis of a film tentatively scheduled for a fall 2019 release by Netflix, which has also picked up "Faun" for development. "Mums" and "Late Returns" were written for this collection, while "Dark Carousel," published in a vinyl audio edition in 2018, appears in print for the first time. With a 200,000-copy first printing.

    Copyright 2019 Library Journal.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2019 September

    Hill's latest collection of short stories is compulsively readable. Thirteen stories weave in and out of gritty realism, whimsical folklore, and futuristic sf, flowing from one to the next in a fast-paced journey through the surreal. Hill fills each story with shocking plot twists, excellent worldbuilding, and satisfying kismet. "By the Silver Water of Lake Champlain," a tribute to Ray Bradbury, tells of innocence and friendship before things go horribly wrong. "The Devil on the Staircase" and "Twittering from the Circus of the Dead" play with form while still captivating readers. "Faun" and "Late Returns" are deeply haunting; they will lurk in the back of readers' minds, destined to be relived and retold. "Throttle" and "In the Tall Grass" are coauthored by Hill's father and horror master Stephen King, and while King's voice sometimes overwhelms his son's, the two create compelling and gruesome stories. VERDICT As in any anthology, some tales are stronger than others, but overall this is a winning entry from Hill. Hand to fans of horror, dark fantasy, and ruthless realities.—Kay Strahan, Univ. of Tennessee Health Sciences Lib., Memphis

    Copyright 2019 Library Journal.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2019 July #1

    Hill's haunting second collection of short fiction (after 2005's 20th Century Ghosts) contains 11 reprints and two new tales, many in homage to films and other stories that have inspired him. Echoes of Richard Matheson's "Duel" ricochet from the terrifying "Throttle" (cowritten with Stephen King), which features a biker gang at the mercy of a relentless big rig driver with a deadly agenda. Shades of Narnia color "Faun," in which a small door in a ramshackle farmhouse leads to a hunting ground. In "Thumbprint," a veteran realizes that her disturbing actions in Iraq might not have been so out of character after all. In the visceral, horrifying "Dark Carousel," a group of teens runs afoul of magic that animates the ragtag, bloodthirsty animals of a boardwalk carousel. The ghostly, achingly poignant "Late Returns" is a love letter to librarians and a haunting exploration of the transformative power of grief. Hill tackles his dark subjects with humanity and empathy, and his complex, fully realized characters leap into the imagination. This collection cements Hill's reputation as a versatile master of scares both subtle and shocking. Agent: Michael Choate, Choate Agency. (Oct.)

    Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.
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