Roots and All
This Stagnant Breath of Change
Scars In Progress
Just Outside Our Windows, Deep Inside Our Walls
Eternal, Ever Since Wednesday
Let My Smile Be Your Umbrella
We, the Fortunate Bereaved
One Possible Shape of Things to Come
Cures for a Sickened World
The Same Deep Waters As You
One Last Year Without a Summer
Endnotes: Because Black Holes Have Emissions After All
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Called “a writer of spectacularly unflinching gifts” by no less than Peter Straub, Brian Hodge is one of those people who always has to be making something. So far, he’s made thirteen novels, around 130 shorter works, five full-length collections, and, for Whom the Gods Would Destroy, a book soundtrack of cinematic ambient and space music. One recent novella of cosmic horror has been optioned for development as a TV series. He lives in Colorado, where he also likes to make music and photographs; loves everything about organic gardening except the thieving squirrels; and trains in Krav Maga and kickboxing, which are of no use at all against the squirrels.
“In his fifth short fiction collection, Skidding Into Oblivion,
Brian Hodge offers readers eleven atmospheric stories in which
readers can immerse themselves. The opening story “Roots and All”
is perhaps one of the best stories I’ve ever read. . . . Hodge’s
story is truly gripping and the imagery he creates is a marvel to
behold. It’s impressive how the prose simultaneously evokes mood,
conveys background, and advances the plot—all while seeming
conversational and matter-of-fact. So much so that you don’t see
the emotional wallop coming until it hits you in the heart.”
—John DeNardo, Kirkus Reviews “Horror fiction aficionados—often
authors themselves—have been raving about the work of novelist and
short story writer Brian Hodge for decades now, though he’s yet to
break through to the mainstream. This new collection gives readers
a chance to jump on the still un-crowded bandwagon to find out what
all the fuss is about. Skidding Into Oblivion contains 11 of
Hodges’ recent short stories, and as he explains in a series of end
notes, the collection reflects his ongoing interest in “cosmic
horror,” a fecund subgenre pioneered by H.P. Lovecraft and other
pulp writers of the mid-20th century in which the very landscape
itself and the stars above are revealed as the locus of human fear.
Hodges employs the genre’s tropes to masterful effect here,
creating tightly plotted, atmospheric tales that are a joy to
read.”
—James Grainger, The Toronto Star “The Immaculate Void is a highly
cinematic, fast-paced, gory, disturbing, yet in its heart of
hearts, touchingly warm tale of horrors which may surpass humanity,
but does not entirely diminish it, even in the face of
apocalypse.”
—Rue Morgue “A writer of spectacularly unflinching gifts . . .
leaves most contemporary horror writing in the dust.”
—Peter Straub “One of the finest authors in the horror field . . .
a literary equivalent of filmmaker David Cronenberg.”
—Fangoria “Not only does Brian Hodge get the ‘cosmic awe’ concept
nailed down, but his characters, and the way he describes the
relationships between them, are expertly drawn to a degree that
[H.P.] Lovecraft himself could never have achieved.”
—The British Fantasy Society “Emotional, thrilling, and
dread-inducing . . . Brian Hodge is clearly a master craftsman of a
writer.”
—This Is Horror UK “Each book of his stands out as so ‘original,’
that I’d have a difficult time in saying which was my personal
favorite. . . . It’s his writing style, combined with his
incredible imagination, which makes his books so consistently
good.”
—Horror After Dark “Brian Hodge has long been a favorite of horror
insiders, both for his audacious themes and his impressive facility
with language. . . . You can hear the music in Hodge’s prose, a
kind of euphony that, at its best, is reminiscent of Brite, Koja,
Gaiman, or even Roger Zelazny, while remaining totally unique.”
—Gothic.net
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