FEEDING OUR DARKNESS:
ALI SEAY’S
TO OFFER HER PLEASURE
Ali Seay’s latest novella, To Offer Her Pleasure, from Weirdpunk Books is an equal parts slow burn meditation on death and a fiercely paced downward spiral that proves not all coming-of-age tales are about defeating the monster. In some cases you become one – a refreshing choice when there are plenty of Losers Club knockoffs packing the aisles of most bookstores.
The story: Ben’s mom bails on him with her drunkard boyfriend, Patrick, shortly after his father’s death. Alone with his grief, the teenager rummages through dad’s belongings seeking some type of reprieve from the emotional pain. What he finds is a book that can offer him more than distractions. The horned woman depicted in its pages promises Ben a brand new life in exchange for a series of escalating sacrifices.
The strength of To Offer Her Pleasure is in its quieter moments. For instance, when Ben tries on his dad’s old shoes as a way to feel closer to the man or when he’s ignoring his mother’s inebriated voicemails and texts while he broods in the dark. There’s no outright horror in these scenes. No eviscerations or supernatural mauling. There doesn’t need to be. Coupled with Seay’s direct, matter-of-fact prose they hit harder than the violence in the book and create an atmosphere of palpable melancholy.
Between the lingering depictions of loss and the strange woman in the book, Seay’s setting is more a dream that Ben drifts through without any real consequence than a stark reality. To elaborate, although Ben’s nosey neighbor regularly checks in on him, he easily assuages her curiosity with vague explanations. Even when the moments of confrontation escalate, such as Patrick turning up to look for Ben’s mother, the possibility of something terrible happening to Seay’s protagonist doesn’t feel likely. This may be by design. Protection could just be part of the deal with the ghostly woman. Still, giving Ben some challenging moments where he feels like the entity has abandoned him would’ve helped round out his character and upped the stakes a little.
That’s not to say shying away from over explaining or keeping it simple is a bad thing—this reader rejoiced that there were no online deep-dives or trips to the library resulting in a full blown character stat sheet for Ben’s new surrogate parent. Ambiguity oftentimes says more than revealing everything and To Offer Her Pleasure revels in less is more. This is mostly beneficial, but a few areas could’ve used a bit more explanation. Especially when it comes to what role the book plays in Ben’s family history and why his dad had it in the first place.
Overall, To Offer Her Pleasure is a quick read that balances impactful moments of horror, family drama, and character to weave a deeply somber narrative about grief. Surprised A24 hasn’t picked up the rights yet as it fits well within their stable. Get on it, folks!
Empathy for the Damned: Jeffrey Thomas’s Carrion Men
Jeffrey Thomas’s latest collection, Carrion Men, from Plutonian Press showcases seven of Thomas’s short stories—five reprints and two originals—tethered by the loose theme of men crushed by the drudgery of day to day life and the horrors they find themselves confronting.
A Sensual Death by a Thousand Cuts
At a time when pop culture has wrung the last sad drops of brine from the pores of evil bastards masquerading as human, Kim Vodicka’s latest poetry collection, Dear Ted, drives a pike through the cancerous flesh and psyche of Ted Bundy, and displays it for the viewing public as a way to deep-dive into what drives one’s self-destructive infatuation with monsters and the pain that comes with falling for horrible men.
Feeding Our Darkness: Ali Seay’s To Offer Her Pleasure
Ali Seay’s latest novella, To Offer Her Pleasure, from Weirdpunk Books is an equal parts slow burn meditation on death and a fiercely paced downward spiral that proves not all coming-of-age tales are about defeating the monster. In some cases you become one – a refreshing choice when there are plenty of Losers Club knockoffs packing the aisles of most bookstores.
Gun Fightin’ for Jesus: Brett Riley’s Lord of Order
Bret Riley’s second novel, Lord of Order, grapples with the horrors enacted in the name of religion, but fails to pin down and explore those that blindly follow and carry out their atrocious orders in a meaningful or complex way.
MELLON FOLLY AND THE INFINITE RETREAD: HUNTER SHEA’S MISFITS
The youth do a lot of the heavy lifting in horror fiction. When monsters roll into town, they’re the only ones to send evil packing. Hunter Shea’s latest novel, Misfits, is the story of one such group of teens fighting creatures that live on the outskirts of their small suburb.
The Cipher by Kathe Koja: A Mind-Bending Descent into The Funhole with a Crew of Failed Artists
For some, The Cipher might be hard to decipher (hey, that rhymes!). First off, its structure seems purposely nonsensical. At least, the people don’t make a lotta sense. So you might start out mad that no one seems to be treating this hole in the ground with the methodical, reasonable investigation it deserves.
Lights…Camera…Implosion: D. Harlan’s Latest is a Madman’s Skewering of the Film Industry
“Work is one thing. Life is the same thing. I apply the parametric model to every aspect of my existence. I don’t even have to try. Here. Watch me do nothing and alchemize eternity,” Betty Lomax says to a drunk Werner Herzog, contemplative Stanley Kubrick and chain smoking David Lynch before turning the restaurant into near nothingness.
IT’S A TRAP! A REVIEW OF MICHAEL DAVID WILSON’S THE GIRL IN THE VIDEO
Welcome to another match, mis amigos! Stepping into the ring with El Critico this round, is Michael David Wilson’s debut novella, The Girl in the Video, from Perpetual Motion Machine publishing.
DIM SHORES PRESENTS VOLUME 1 IS A HEFTY BATTLE ROYALE OF STRANGE FICTION
Dim Shores have made their name over the years as a curator of strange fiction specializing mostly in novellas, their previously acclaimed anthology, Looming Low, and Dim Shores Presents Volume 1 (DSPV1).
PROFESSOR DARIO BAVA IS HERE TO STICK IT TO EVIL (AND THE MAN)
Paying homage to the works we love and flat out ripping them off is a tough tightrope to walk. As we’ve seen with the popularity of Stranger Things or Tarantino & Rodriguez’s double-bill homage to the grindhouse, sometimes you hit a home run and others, you find out you’ve jumped into your neighbor’s pool without asking.
HIGH-TECH MISANTHROPY: SCOTT JONES’S STONEFISH IS THE WORLD WE DESERVE
Scott Jones’s debut novel, Stonefish, is cosmic madness and mystery wrapped in a blanket made of the paranoid future-fantasies of Philip K. Dick and Lovecraft’s dread of the void.