Photo de l'auteur

C. V. Hunt

Auteur de Halloween Fiend

32+ oeuvres 341 utilisateurs 19 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de C. V. Hunt

Halloween Fiend (2019) 59 exemplaires
Endlessly (2011) 52 exemplaires
Ritualistic Human Sacrifice (2015) 33 exemplaires
How To Kill Yourself (2012) 20 exemplaires
Cockblock (2018) 15 exemplaires
Last Woman On Earth (2013) 15 exemplaires
Other People's Shit (2013) 12 exemplaires
Hell's Waiting Room (2014) 12 exemplaires
Baby Hater (2014) 11 exemplaires
Zombieville (2013) 10 exemplaires
Legacy (2011) 9 exemplaires
Thanks For Ruining My Life (2013) 9 exemplaires
Home Is Where the Horror Is (2017) 9 exemplaires
Cockblock 8 exemplaires
Murder House (2020) 8 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Gorefikacje III (2018) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Hunt, C. V.
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieux de résidence
Yellow Springs, Ohio, USA
Dayton, Ohio, USA
Organisations
Grindhouse Press (owner)

Membres

Critiques

‘Cockblock’ is a disturbing, angry, graphic, hypnotic mind fuck of a book that takes a simple concept and runs with for just the right number of pages. The story is a bare bones affair that will be familiar to anyone who has ever watched a zombie movie - the world starts falling apart with large swathes of the population turning on their neighbours and a group of survivors banding together to get through it. What’s different here is the nature of the aggressors, all male and attacking sexually more than physically. What follows is often graphic and unpleasant but always effective. The attackers shout cheesy chat up lines as they stalk their prey in a manner that seemed odd at first but increasingly becomes really chilling. This is clearly a book with a message, and a very current one at that - America’s misogynist-in-chief Donald Flump even gets to make an appearance. It’s laid on pretty thick but the book is no worse for that, even if Hunt’s writing can’t always keep pace with her passion and polemic. The book is never subtle, and it’s often too horrific to be entertaining, but I don’t think I’ll be forgetting it anytime soon.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
whatmeworry | Apr 9, 2022 |
This review first appeared in scifiandscary.com
‘Halloween Fiend’ is one of those books that leaves you thinking. Like CV Hunt’s excellent novella ‘Cockblock’, ‘Halloween Fiend’ is an intelligent slice of horror that’s quite different from most of what’s on the market at the moment. It lacks the raw, emotional punch of ‘Cockblock’, but makes up for it with great atmosphere and a memorably creepy monster. It’s a simple tale that gets under your skin and stays there. The brilliance of it is that there isn’t an obvious reason why it does that – it isn’t graphic or shocking, it’s just a well-written, subtle, small town horror story.
The town in question is Strang, a messed-up community haunted by a creature the locals call ‘Halloween’ that preys on local animals and occasionally people. The narrator is an inhabitant of the town, an older man who is convincing and sympathetic even if he isn’t always likeable. He is an effective protagonist, starting to question the relationship between the town and the fiend for the first time as the story progresses and more of the town’s secrets are revealed are revealed to the reader.
At only 100 pages, this isn’t a long book by any means, but Hunt packs a lot into it. I can imagine many any author spinning this concept out into a 500-page monster (looking at you, Mr King). Hunt keeps things brief and doesn’t waste a word. She wrings all the meaning from the story without exhausting the reader.
What makes the story as effective as it is, is that Strang is a believable community. For all the strangeness of its situation, the town’s inhabitants and their reaction to the problem they face is convincing. The story drags to the surface humanity’s willingness to put up with bad shit for a quiet life. Like so many of us, the people of Strang would rather maintain their town’s terrible status quo, than recognise their own complicity in it.
Most of all though, ‘Halloween Fiend’ is great horror. It has a superb monster and reads a bit like the unholy offspring of HP Lovecraft and Shirley Jackson. I enjoyed every page and it reaffirmed the sense I had after reading ‘Cockblock’ that Hunt is a very talented writer.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
whatmeworry | 1 autre critique | Apr 9, 2022 |
Barry is forty-five, overweight and has been employed at the town's general store for thirty years. He's never dated and lives with his dad, who claims to be confined to his motorized chair but Barry knows he can walk, he just likes to have Barry do everything for him. Barry's life is uneventful and dull during the day, but every night is filled with terror, as this small town is visited by Halloween, a shape-shifting presence that demands a live "treat" from every resident. Barry can't help but listen for Halloween on the porch, dreading the sounds he hears, but it gets even worse when Halloween begins taunting Barry through the doors and windows. And then the mayor brings in carnival rides for the town's Fall Festival, which brings carnies, and Barry doesn't know if the presence of outsiders after dark will make things better or worse for him.

If you have a Kindle and want a truly tense read, this is a good one with a strong nod to Shirley Jackson.
… (plus d'informations)
1 voter
Signalé
mstrust | 1 autre critique | Sep 28, 2021 |
3.75 rounded up. Well written, solid, atmospheric novella with an ending that caught me off guard. I thought the story was going in one direction & it turns out I was super wrong - it took a hard turn into a level of dementedness (is that a word?) that was gross, but pretty satisfying.
 
Signalé
tattooedreader13 | Aug 27, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
32
Aussi par
1
Membres
341
Popularité
#69,903
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
19
ISBN
22
Langues
1

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