Publishers Weekly

SF/FANTASY/HORROR

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Who’s There?: A Collection of Stories Dimas Rio | Velox Books 191p, e-book, $13.95, ISBN 979-8-831-90849-7

Menace oozes off the pages of this collection of gripping short stories from Rio, a treat for readers who appreciate the surprising beauty of sheer horror. The tales delve into both the shadows of our world and “the hidden cavities of [the] soul” as Rio’s protagonis­ts face both terrors rooted in Asian folk traditions as well as their own true selves: “drunk, paranoid and drenched, like someone just took a leak on him,” a man searches desperatel­y for his fiancee on the eve of their wedding, only to discover nauseating death. Rio, who was born in Indonesian and uses that nation as a setting, keeps readers on their toes with ambitions not limited to a single genre. One story builds, bloodily, to a spike tearing flesh; the ghostly “The Voice Canal,” meanwhile, in which a student believes he hears the voice of his late father, pierces the heart instead.

Poetry and philosophy pepper and bookend the unsettling tales, without slowing down or undercutti­ng narrative momentum, a testament to Rio’s artistry. Tension builds ominously as the nightmare realities of the scenarios dawn on characters and readers both—reading, it’s hard not to inch one’s nose closer to the page in shivering anticipati­on at “something old and mouldy” in the storeroom, or at a business man giving his “peasant” lover his mother’s necklace, a perverse sort of “coronation,” when the lover knows the mother would consider her “a dishonorab­le woman” who “fornicates” with the son. Afterwards, the couple “maul[s] each other as if they lusted for blood”—as in, they make love—and when the trap snaps, the entranced reader is as surprised as the prey.

This Indonesia is haunted by ghosts and devils and dispatches from the dead, but also guilt, class concerns, and more. Repeating figures like overbearin­g mothers and disloyal lovers feels universal, even if the myths and legends breathing life into these stories are fresh to readers.

Cover: A- | Design & typography: A| Illustrati­ons: – Editing: A | Marketing copy: A

 ?? ?? Gripping, unsettling horror stories of a haunted Indonesia.
Great for fans of Intan Paramadith­a’s Apple and Knife, Adam Nevill’s Some Will Not Sleep.
Gripping, unsettling horror stories of a haunted Indonesia. Great for fans of Intan Paramadith­a’s Apple and Knife, Adam Nevill’s Some Will Not Sleep.
 ?? ??

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