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Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Horror Fiction Help XXI

Wow, Horror Fiction Help is old enough to drink! We've had some great success tracking down the forgotten titles of yesteryear, so how's about a few more? I and the folks looking for these books thank you, so cheers—you know who you are.


1. ’66/’67: Story involving a boy who wakes up to witness small, lizard-like creatures entering his body and carrying away bits of it. Of course no one believes him, and this keeps happening. He discovers the creatures are somehow taking the place of the bits they carry off. In the end, he meets a copy of himself, assembled from the bits that had been stolen, and when this copy announces itself as the real boy, our protagonist disintegrates into a swarm of the lizards. End of tale. 

2. My mom had a paperback book that I read a few times when I was a kid that I thought was called Black Mass or Black Sabbath. It was a black cover with a pentagram embossed on it and (I think I’m remembering correctly) a satanic goat head. The story was about a girl, deja-vu with a tree (because she was reincarnated), and a man she falls in love with who ends up being a satanic priest out to kill her (again). I THINK this is right, but not entirely sure, as it’s been about 40 years since I read it last. Found! It's Black Sabbat by J.B. Herman:


3. Sometime ’80s, purchased at a grocery store, drugstore, or Kmart. The cover is black-embossed and it is I believe a large black cat, jaguar or something. The cat is or is possessed by an evil spirit, attacking the people of a woodsy lake area or island... like in New England, not somewhere tropical. The main character is a detective/cop trying to hunt the beast. I believe the large cat is a female, maybe referred to as a she-beast by the main character. Found! It's Moonslasher by Douglas D. Hawk.

4. ’70s/early ’80s: the cover was purple and had the embossed, in black, wide-stretched jaws of a big cat, all fangs and stuff, alluringly emblazoned upon it. Or maybe it was the open maw of a panther of some sort, open mouth that sort of encompassed the book’s title, more a line drawing than a painting, and embossed. I could have sworn the book was about an ancient evil/demon being released and its grisly killing spree in a museum of some sort (*not* The Relic and *not* Panther!). 

5. ’70s/early ’80s: had to have been a best seller, because it was in the supermarket. This was the rural south, so they weren't gonna waste shelf space. The cover was dark and depicted a sort of "Solid Gold" (the tv music show) stage set, with large squares. It was a photograph, not a painted cover. And there was a single hand extended from behind one of them. It was inexplicable, and SO eerie, and scared me silly, and I don't even know why.

6. 89 or 90. It's a compilation of horror stories. The cover is black on top with a square of illustration covering the bottom. It features a man in ill-fitting clothing. Ripped jeans, letterman's jacket (red?) and I know there's a severed leg somewhere in there (the memory of it is kind of fading). He's crouching in the middle of a forest. A few items are around him, maybe from his victims (a red shoe?). He looks animalistic, perhaps not to the extent of being a werewolf, but like he degraded into insanity.

The one story I read was written in the form of log entries by the captain. His crew is in space looking for a habitable planet, from what I recall. The planet they land on is full of vegetation and the only life they can see are butterflies. The planet is full of butterflies. Previously I had thought that by eating some of the vegetation that the crew, having landed there, had turned into butterflies, themselves. I don't even remember what happened to them. Eventually, the captain's log degenerated as his mind failed him. The last page was full of big loops and curly cues as he forgot how to write.  

Found! It's "Gestation" by Bruce Jones:

7 comments:

  1. 2: This could be J.B.Herman Black Sabbat, Major Books 1979

    4: This could be Robert Holdstock writing as Robert Faulcon, The Night Hunter 5 - The Hexing, 1984. Cover of the first edition.

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  2. The last one reminds me of "Gestation" by Bruce Jones: http://bronzeageofblogs.blogspot.com/2019/10/bruce-jones-gestation.html

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  3. To the person who advised that the last story described was "Gestation" THANK YOU ENDLESSLY!!! Now I have something to go by in order to find the entire book of compiled stories. Idk that the entire book was by Bruce Jones, but this is absolutely 100% the story I had read from it.

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  4. Probably not it because the plotline doesn't match, nor does the picture description completely, but, just in case since memory can be a funny thing sometimes... Deadly Nature's cover is mostly purple and features big jaws - https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ZKOPQ1vnQcQ/VRhtp_yZE7I/AAAAAAAABBc/alWRk0nymi8/s1600/scan0013.jpg

    Could #3 possibly be Panther by Alan Ryan? https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1374617776l/970100.jpg Or Cat by Andrew Sinclair? http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-lm_7S3KhaoY/VVQni14l2ZI/AAAAAAAALVI/6qUOAg7nq7U/s1600/Cat%2C%2BAndrew%2BSinclair.jpg

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  5. The story described in #6 is Gestation, as has been pointed out. But the cover that is described is from Bruce Jones’ book Twisted Tales (Blackthorne publishing, 1987). It is a book of prose stories and some (maybe all) are adaptations of his horror/sci-fi comics. Gestation is titled Cycles in its prose form.

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  6. The story described in #6 is Gestation, as has been pointed out. But the cover that is described is from Bruce Jones’ book Twisted Tales (Blackthorne publishing, 1987). It is a book of prose stories, very much in the style of his horror/sci fi comics for Warren and Pacific. It doesn’t, however, contain Gestation,

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  7. #1 Potential lead? There's an Are You Afraid of the Dark episode called "The Tale of the Chameleons". A lizard turns a teenaged girl into a lizard and steals her appearance; as the episode progresses, nobody believes the girl; importantly, the lizard has to bite her multiple times in order to complete the transformation. There's no "Based on a story by X" credit, but perhaps the episode writer drew inspiration from, and can identify, your white whale.

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