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The Monster's Corner: Stories Through Inhuman Eyes
 
 
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The Monster's Corner: Stories Through Inhuman Eyes [Paperback]

Christopher Golden
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Piatkus (27 Sep 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0749957859
  • ISBN-13: 978-0749957858
  • Product Dimensions: 13.8 x 2.9 x 21.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 363,011 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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David Moody
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Product Description

Book Description

An all-original anthology from some of today's best supernatural writers with a unique twist on a very popular genre: these are stories of monsters . . . from the monster's point of view!

Product Description

In most stories we get the perspective of the hero, the ordinary, the everyman, but we are all the hero of our own tale, and so it must be true for legions of monsters, from Lucifer to Mordred, from child-thieving fairies to Frankenstein's monster and the Wicked Witch of the West. From our point of view, they may very well be horrible, terrifying monstrosities, but of course they won't see themselves in the same light, and their point of view is what concerns us in these tales. Demons and goblins, dark gods and aliens, creatures of myth and legend, lurkers in darkness and beasts in human clothing . . . these are the subjects of THE MONSTER'S CORNER.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Gareth Wilson - Falcata Times Blog TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
It's probably no secret that I love short stories and when you get a batch of them told by well-known genre authors bound together through the theme of them being told from the "monsters" point of view, it made this a fun, interesting and different set of stories to the ones that you normally get (with my personal favourite being Kelley Armstrong's Rakshasi.)

Add to this that whilst most are well known, you do get the chance to try some that you might not have dipped your toe in the water with before and it's a great way to spend money and still have an excellent product at the end of the day with a chance to see if some of the others are for you. Finally throw into this the cover price and it's a lot of boo for your buck. Great fun.
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Amazon.com:  5 reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Great book, told from monsters POV 31 Dec 2011
By The Book Blogger - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
When I downloaded the e-book it was actually because of Tananarive Due's short story "The Lake" which is part of Golden's anthology and was so engrossing and enjoyable that I had to read more.

Well, most members have already posted up a review on every story, so I will give a few of my favorites. My absolute favorite was "Awkward Age", "The screaming Room", "Big Man", and "The Lake"

Each story was seen from the perspective more or less, of the monster. This meant there was no frilly excuses for why they did what they did. It just is what it is. Some monsters are born while others are made. Thats the theme in reality and this is the theme in Monsters Corner.

In "Awkward Age" an older man is falling for a young, attractive girl who claims to be a ghoul and it isn't until the every end that he....okay I'll leave it at that. "The Screaming Room" is about Medusa and her thoughts on seducing men she thinks are handsome but is torured by their song of, well, torture. She has to live with that forever. In "Big Man", an ordinary guy is unfortunately a guinea pig for a new drug that enhance muscles, what he doesn't bet on is his body stretching-stretching-stretching every minute. And the town grows in fear.

"The Lake" is about a teacher tranferring to a school and her penchant for young, fresh men gets the best of her. In fact, one swim in the lake will increase her appetite to monstrous levels...

This book was awesome and I will be reading The New Dead...already downloaded the sample.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Stories that Break the Rules 29 Sep 2011
By TammyJo Eckhart - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Christopher Golden's childhood fascination with monsters has grown into this 19-story anthology from St. Martin's Press. He believes that the interest in and horror of monsters is really a method of defining ourselves in regard to others. Using this as his starting point, The Monster's Corner offers us tales of misunderstood monsters by giving us their motives, thoughts, and feelings.

Golden established four basic rules for the anthology. First these must be misunderstood monsters not evil creatures, no random serial killer no matter how abuse he survived. Second he accepted no vampires or zombies feeling that these monsters are too popular and too easy for authors to work with. Third he didn't want a lot of human monsters but he admits in the introduction that a few appear. Actually more than a few appear because the most common creature in this collection is the human turned into something else by magic, events, chemicals, or even desire. Finally he wanted new stories though the introduction claims one appears in a small press book that barely sold; which story that is, is unstated anywhere in the anthology.

The authors who contributed to The Monster's Corner range from newly published to popular selling to award wining; these categories overlapped a few times as well. Given the pedigree the stories should all reach out and shake the reader but the quality varied from truly creepy and unique to confusing.

A good horror story can begin in a confusing fashion, even end in a confusion fashion, as long as the reader feels connected to the narrator or intrigued enough by events to pause and sort through the fuzziness. The sense that there is no sense in a horror story can help the reader understand the makes the situation or the characters terrifying. This is certainly the case in Gary A. Braunbeck's "And You Still Wonder Why Our First Impulse is to Kill You," Michael Marshall Smith's "The Other One," and Dana Stabenow's "Siren Song;" in each of these time is flexible and viewpoint skewed leaving everyone unsettled. However Lauren Groff's "Rue" while almost poetically written is confused that by the end we have to ask what, who, or if there was a monster at all.

Many of the monsters in The Monster's Corner are familiar especially if you're a fan of their kind in stories, movies, or TV shows. The trick for this anthology is to offer us something new, a view we haven't seen before. Several of the stories do this well. David Liss's ghoul girl from "The Awkward Age" and David Moody's radiation fed creature in "Big Man" get us directly inside the heads of the things we should be afraid of. Tom Piccirilli's fairies are neither creepy nor sympathic in "The Cruel Thief of Rosy Infants" but the story goes beyond the changeling's handler's mind to assault us the evils of child abuse and society's part in it.

There are very human monsters that got into Golden's collection regardless of his rules. Nate Kenyon's artist in "Breeding Demons" is soul shaking because we feel his need to create even though it is destructive. The witch pushed too far barely registers as a monster when we hear her side from Heather Graham in "Wicked Be." We almost feel a connection to the new teacher in town who spends too much time in "The Lake" by Tananarive Due but her motivations aren't the purest to begin with. "Saint John" really appears to be more a hero in a dark apocalyptic world than a monster plus he is an abuse survivor, that fact paramount to the plot; how did this wonderful story by Jonathan Maberry qualify for this anthology at all?

Even the most horrifying creatures can be down right funny when we get into their heads and see their pompous beliefs. "Jesus and Satan Go Jogging in the Desert" by Simon R. Green is amusing though it rehashes a lot of Biblical text. John McIlvenn presents a very different Satan "Succumb," one devil we cheer louder for with each passionate thrust from a wanton preacher. The famous creature from New Jersey is revealed to be completely deluded egomaniac in Sharyn McCrumb's "Rattler and the Mothman." One of the strongest stories in this book "Specimen 313" from Jeff Strand will make you laugh and laugh while your stomach turns cold.

Finally we have our classic or widespread monsters whose heads we peek into with varying results. We feel almost sad for Medusa's loneliness-driven insanity in Sarah Pinborough's "The Screaming Room." Any lover second-chances must respect the Indian demon's need for freedom in "Rakshasi" by Kelley Armstrong. While Chelsea Cain creates empathy for the creature under our child's bed right from the first sentence, that ends when we see the lengths to which both girl and monster go to prove their friendship in "Less of a Girl." Sadly the use of Nazis in "Torn Stitches, Shattered Glass" felt cliché as a way to help us understand Frankenstein's Monster in Kevin J. Anderson's story; it really feels like this has been done before.

Not every tale in The Monster's Corner offers us both personal and cultural insight in a balanced fashion. Some monsters are more accessible than others because of the writing style or the character development. This isn't a "best of" anthology however and that only five fell a bit short, that is a good rate of quality in any genre's collection. Whether you sympathize with monsters like Christopher Golden does or not, these 19 glimpses into their minds and hearts will make you laugh, make you think, and make you feel a bit dirty at times. That is what makes any horror anthology worth reading.
Great Collection Worth the Price 15 Nov 2011
By TheSlinkyWhoWrites - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The Monster's Corner is an excellent selection of stories, though not necessarily what I was expecting when I cracked open the spine. There are a few stories I liked less than others, but, for the most part, I felt all the contributing writers had something fresh to say. My favorite tales--and I do hate picking favorites because several of the stories featured characters I found entertaining--included "Torn Stitches, Shattered Glass" by Kevin J. Anderson (a must-read for fans of Frankenstein's monster), "Less of a Girl" by Chelsea Cain (short and...well, not so sweet--but that's the point, right?), "Rakshasi" by Kelley Armstrong, and "Breeding the Demons" by Nate Kenyon (how are demons made, anyhow?). Also, Simon R. Green's closing number gave me a laugh and helped round out the bunch.

All in all? Worth the read if you're a fan of the genre
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