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Geralt - Humans Are Monsters Uncategorized

Misery

“I’m your number one fan.”

My mom says this book terrifies her, but I don’t quite understand. I’m her number one fan, and I’m sure she would love it if I took care of her and gave her a lovely room and hobbled her legs so she could never leave me.

Maybe the difference is I’m a cat and not a psychotic nurse.

Hello, everyone! This is Geralt back at work again reviewing the books The Writer makes me read. Apparently this month is supposed to be super scary for humans. I don’t want my mom to be scared, so I make sure I fall asleep on her face so she can’t read the scary words in the stories.

I’m her number one fan…

She just doesn’t appreciate everything I do for her, just like Paul isn’t grateful enough for all Annie Wilkes is willing to do for him.

The Writer is giving me a weird look.

Anyways, I’m going to review Stephen King’s Misery, a 1987 horror and psychological thriller that continues to terrify audiences. It was one of King’s only books to not incorporate fantastical elements (such as pyrokinesis or telepathy), and also became one of his only great film adaptations.

So, what do I think of it?

Quite a lot.

The Plot

The plot is an excellent example of a contained story with few locations. In Misery, the protagonist is Paul Sheldon, an author who has been restricted by his own popularity. He feels smothered by a character he created, Misery Chastain, and is unable to branch out to other endeavors because his cheesy, trashy romances pay the bills.

Sheldon is an alcoholic and decides, during one of his binges, to try and drive to Los Angeles instead of return to New York. He crashes while trapped in a snowstorm in Colorado, and wakes up injured in the home of former nurse Annie Wilkes.

The story rapidly goes downhill from there. Wilkes is unstable, fanatically obsessed with Misery and Sheldon, and drugging the writer to keep him compliant and addicted so he doesn’t leave. When she discovers her favorite character has been killed off in the final novel of the Misery Chastain series, she flies into a psychotic rage and abandons Sheldon for two days without food, water, or his painkillers.

To make matters worse, many of the keys stop working on the typewriter. The horror!

What happens next is a modern Scheherazade tale full of nightmare fuel. Sheldon must write a new book that brings Misery back to life while being tormented by Wilkes’ whims. He cannot escape, and any resistance is met with harsh punishments, including a truly gruesome hobbling and the loss of his thumb to an electric knife.

The only way Sheldon can win is by outsmarting Wilkes and using her own obsession against her – but not without losing pieces of himself physically and metaphorically.

Also, there were no cats in this book. Shame. There is a pig named Misery though, so that’s something.

The Review

The Writer considers this to be one of the scariest stories she ever read, and it’s easy to see why. Annie Wilkes is a classic example of a character who is deeply disturbed. From her first appearance, it is clear there is something just off about her. Once she doesn’t get her way, her rage and psychotic episodes become obvious.

However, while Wilkes might be the greatest villain King ever wrote, Misery really stands out for its metaphors and writing style. Paul Sheldon is addicted – to painkillers, to alcohol, and to writing. He must battle his addiction to make it out alive, and many of the events and passages in the book were taken from King’s own experiences trying to get clean.

The writing is linear but includes many passages from Sheldon’s own novels, as well as his numerous asides and memories. What the reader knows of Wilkes and the world outside is limited to only what Sheldon knows, meaning we have the same anxiety and fear as the poor trapped man.

While some parts of the book can drag and Annie seems to be a cornucopia of mental illness with no real diagnosis, this is one horror volume that will leave readers at the edges of their seats.

The only downside is you might need a trash can nearby when you read the hobbling scene. If you can make it without vomiting, you can survive the rest of the book.

Plus, the movie is stellar.

I never knew Kathy Bates would haunt my nightmares for years.

Overall, I give misery 5/5 Paws.

While there are no cats, there are plenty of feline frights to be had. Just don’t read this book if you are an amateur writer. You will be afraid to ever publish anything again.

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Spooktober!

We the cats have decreed the Writer needs to start submitting reviews again now that the dangerous “cor-en-tine” thing has been lifted. When would be a better time to write about spooky, scary stories than during the month of October?

Starting on the 15th, we’re going to be posting one review a day to count down to our favorite holiday. Why is it our favorite? Because we get more treats!

If you have a book, story, or even a movie you want to see reviewed, feel free to comment below. Otherwise, you will have to read based on our whims!

We’re excited to be back and writing. Here is Flint practicing his best “scared” face.

(The Writer says we have to tell you Flint is not being harmed in this photo. He just doesn’t like baths)

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Zelda - Action and Monsters

Sour Candy

“His Facebook and Twitter pages now featured pictures of Phil grinning like an idiot in places he’d never been with his arm around a boy he hadn’t known before today.”

Hi, everyone! Zelda here! The Writer finally said it’s my turn to do a review so I stop terrifying everyone with my quarantine hyper-ness!

I’m going to start this review with a very simple statement: I hate the narrator. I’m not a fan of kids either – they’re terrifying – but the author does everything possible to make the narrator inherently unlikable from the start.

But what is this story anyway?

Sour Candy is a self-published novella written by Irish dark fiction and horror author Kealan Patrick Burke. It debuted in 2007 and centers around a man named Phil Pendleton, who suddenly finds his life turned upside down when a child appears on his doorstep and claims to be his son. Everyone around him agrees the boy is his, and all of the pictures in his home and social media have changed to happy images of the two together.

But who is this boy? And why is this book in the monster section of the reviews?

The Plot

The firmly against children Phil has been spending quality time with his girlfriend, Lori, one weekday. He is sent to the store to pick up chocolate and has his selection process disturbed by a child screaming. The kid in question is the eponymous boy, who is dragging around a woman who looks half dead.

When a police officer arrives to remove the disruption from the store, the mother grabs two handfuls of sour candy and jams them in her mouth, choking. The boy is off to the side and offers Phil a piece of candy, which he foolishly accepts.

Listen, “don’t take candy from strangers” applies to adults to.

Not even if the candy looks delicious…

When Phil leaves the store, he is in a fender bender with the woman in her faded Toyota. She stumbles out of the car and kills herself in front of him.

Things go downhill for Phil afterwards. He discovers the boy at his house and is thrust into a nightmarish Twilight Zone with everyone claiming the child is his. The photos have changed to match. There is a birth certificate and a supposed birth mother. Even the boy insists he is just a boy and that Phil is his father.

Phil slowly deteriorates. He starts to lose his hair and teeth. His life fades away. He struggles to piece together what is happening around him.

Then the monsters appear!

The boy is working for strange, horned abominations called The Elders, and the sour candy he was handing out was not food, but a seed. A seed from which more monsters could grow.

Phil kills the boy in an attempt to stop his fate, but it is too late. He is trapped by The Elders and burns alive in his home, forced to birth whatever monstrous being has been growing inside him and stealing his life force.

The story ends with the detective who had been investigating the original mother’s suicide discovering that a child was left in the backseat of his car. And everyone claims it is his.

The Review

I like treats, and this has taught me not to take treats from strangers unless I want to become the host for a strange eldritch demon.

I got to be honest: I liked this story, but I hated Phil from the beginning. I felt sympathetic towards him and his situation, but he was an unpleasant character from the first chapter and lacked some significant character development later on. He decided he did not want children long ago, and suffered a messy divorce when his wife changed her mind about having children.

He sounds like the embodiment of a certain subreddit dedicated entirely to hating on children and the people who choose to have them.

Even the novella itself seems like an advertisement for the use of birth control – who wants a loud, obnoxious, evil child in their life?

Despite disliking Phil’s overall tone, disdain of kids, and intense focus on whether or not women are attractive, I loved the premise of the story.

Who would have guessed sour candy is so sinister?

Even a single worm can doom you forever…

I give Sour Candy 3/5 Paws. It earns four paws for the premise, but loses one for the execution.

Listen. I don’t even like kids and I could not get over how obnoxious Phil was. The Writer also didn’t like him, and she doesn’t even want kids!

But to be fair, she says she’s used to something needy always demanding attention and treats and…wait. She’s looking at me with that weird look when she says that.

I’m not annoying. I’m delightful!

Now where’s my reward for doing this review?

Hello?

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Geralt - Humans Are Monsters

Out Behind the Barn

“Don’t you feel a buzz in ya?”

You humans are strange creatures. When you can’t get something you want the right way, you have to try the wrong way.

Do you suppose hammers hurt?

In Out Behind the Barn by John Boden and Chad Lutzke, I had a chance to see just how far someone is willing to go to fill the empty void in their heart. Unfortunately, their method involved leaving voids where others’ hearts should be.

Do you love your mother? I do.

Out Behind the Barn inspires many feelings in its readers. For me, I was filled with a profound melancholy, thinking about the woman who wanted a family, with two little boys who would love her forever. I love my mother. I could never leave her.

But these boys left their mother.

Each one found themselves leaving both of their mothers.

They lost the first when Miss Maggie kidnapped and killed them so she could resurrect them as her children. They lost the second when they found their hearts and killed themselves so they could be at peace. So they could stop the buzzing in their bodies.

Out Behind the Barn is a short, simple novella with a mystery which slowly unravels as you realize the mother, Miss Maggie, is not all she seems to be. She cooks wonderful food, but the boys cannot taste it. She educates them in literature, but has books they are forbidden to read. She tries to bring them a father, but she murders to do so.

Norman Bates would be proud of her methods, or perhaps Herbert West.

She’s still not as cute as me….

For the feline fans, there is a cat in this book. An adorable kitten, in fact. And since this is a book of horror and emotional loss, the kitten is murdered by a person who came back wrong.

So, some points are added for the cat, and some might be subtracted if the Writer steps away from the scoreboard for a moment…just need to learn how to write with the pen…

There. Done. She’ll never know.

Conclusion

When it comes to novellas, Out Behind the Barn is a prime example of the medium. It utilizes writing tropes and techniques well to create an engaging, emotionally effective story. While I saw the twist coming from a mile away, it was still beautifully done.

Plus, there’s a cat! And references to Lovecraft! And Bradbury!

It’s an engaging read for a cozy afternoon if you would like to be emotionally devastated rather than horrified.

Overall, Out Behind the Barn earns 4/5 Paws.

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Our Experts

Unperturbed and Unflappable

Cats are the true experts of horror, for who else could remain calm in the face of the eldritch and unnatural?

– The Writer

Geralt

Some say I love my mother too much, but I say I have the right amount of love. A true cornucopia of affection. My emotional state is that of Norman Bates, filled with nothing but a healthy respect and admiration for my favorite human, The Writer.

My qualifications as a reviewer are beyond compare. I have studied people extensively for the past eight years and possess an intricate knowledge of their behaviors and mannerisms. The unique psychology possessed by you bipedal beasts is a keen interest of mine. As such, my favorite stories are those concerned with people and the human mind.

Also, I’m not as dumb as some of the humans say. Yes, I have a bad habit of eating fake flowers, vomiting, and then crying until I am consoled. But doesn’t everyone have their thing?

Some say my favor can be bought with snuggles. It is true I insist on being cuddled during my entire review, but pats and head boops will not sway my opinion.

Zelda

I like to adventure and do things and go outside and chase the ball and scratch the furniture and annoy big brother Geralt and meow and meow and meow until someone notices me and –

Sorry, let me try again. The humans are giving me weird looks.

My favorite stories are adventures where there is plenty of action and exhilaration. I’m not a fan of the slow build and want to get to the fun as soon as possible. I’m also easily startled and get freaked out by sudden surprises. It adds to the excitement!

My favorite human is the Cat Daddy. He raised me and loved me long before The Writer showed up, so I tell him my reviews and he passes them on. If it sounds like I just keep rambling and rambling and rambling, I swear it’s not my fault!

Blame the game of telephone between the humans.

Now, do you have my ball? Wanna play? WANNA PLAY?!

Flint

I have seen things.

Horrible things.

The twisting, eldritch, squamous things which live beyond the stars and play with our galaxy like a pigeon plays with a chess set: Poorly.

Some days my nip is the only thing keeping me from going insane.

My favorite human, the Good Doctor, says I’m a brat, but she’s a liar. I’m just accustomed to being the only cat and everyone else needs to get out of my way. Yes, my nose belongs in the human’s glass of soda. Yes, my butt belongs in the human’s face. Yes, all of the knitting is mine.

I like to review stories of the ancient creatures of the universe while my human serves me kibble, freshens my water, and calls me a good boy. It helps me avoid thinking about the unfathomable end of our world and the futility of existence.