Sunday, 1 March 2026

EVERY PLACE UNLIKE HOME by Charles Wilkinson (Zagava 2026)

 



On the top floor of a converted warehouse, the restaurant is a discreet venue, well away from the established haunts of the political power brokers and the press. The large windows overlook the river on one side and a strangely shaped late-modernist masterpiece made out of glass and steel on the other. The light is aggressively grey yet slick, as if everything it touches is in the process of being weaponised.

Thus begins a strange novel, yet one that seems oddly familiar in so many of its themes and characters. Every Place Unlike Home is the story of a deeply unpleasant Tory politician facing a massive crisis as his sordid past threatens to destroy his career. Given that, you might expect it to be told in a fairly hard-boiled, almost journalistic fashion. But it is not. Instead, this book's antecedents seem to be - in no particular order - Robert Aickman's strange tales, Flann O'Brien's The Third Policeman, a light seasoning of Kafka, and perhaps a dash of Michael Frayn's Sweet Dreams. At least, that is your humble reviewer's take. Others, and especially the author, may disagree.

When I first received this review copy I felt more than a little dismay. As I get older I find it harder to read longer works. Attention spans are shortening and getting old doesn't help. But as I began to read I found myself drawn into the shadowy world of Stephen Otterway, a sadist, snob, liar, and rising star of the Conservative Party. HIs meeting with Wren, one of many grotesque yet believable characters, sets the ball rolling. Does Otterway have any dirty laundry in his past that could cause problems if he is given a junior ministerial role? Oh no, of course not.

With that blatant lie, Otterway's odyssey begins. He must try to cover up a scandal that led to a young man's suicide. Unscrupulous, incapable of love or friendship, and a bully by nature, Otterway has left a trail of damaged lives and betrayed people. He has an ex-wife whom he bribed to keep quiet about his horrendous sexual sadism. The mother of the boy he bullied mercilessly at an obscure boarding school is seldom far away. And then there is the psychiatrist who recorded their therapy sessions thirty years earlier. Otterway can't let those tapes fall into the wrong hands.

This grubby quest takes Otterway to the Welsh Marches and an obscure town called Hye. It is here that his reality starts to come unglued, as our villain is constantly balked in his attempts to get the tapes and paper files. What is he to make of the sound of trains in the distance when Hye has not had rail service in decades? How can he keep getting lost, as if the town constantly reconstructs itself when he's not looking? And who is the Knit-wit, a very rude man in a colourful woollen hat, who torments him intermittently?

The novel alternates between past and present, with its descriptions of boarding school life being particularly convincing i.e. grim. Wilkinson deftly ushers us towards the 'incident' that Otterway is desperate to erase from his personal history, while his every move seems to make discovery and scandal more likely. Otterway is a familiar character, clearly owing something to chancers like Johnson and Farage. It is precisely his belief in his own exceptional qualities that makes his eventual fate inevitable. 

Friday, 27 February 2026

VOTIVE OFFERINGS (Sarob Press 2026)

A new title from Sarob is always of interest, and I'm fortunate to have received a review copy from Rob Morgan. 

Superb owl by Paul Lowe


Votive Offerings consists of four stories by - in order of appearance - Mark Valentine, John Howard, Peter Bell, and Colin Insole. It does my old heart good to note that all have contributed to ST down the years. In this review, I will do my best to avoid spoilers. As a minor aside, I don't mind spoilers for books or films, but I know they drive some people bonkers. 

'Roman Masks' by Mark Valentine is set on the English side of the Solway Firth, where a group of art college teachers and students half-playfully immerse themselves in the landscape's pagan past. As always with Valentine's stories, I learned a lot from this one and enjoyed the process. There are some fine scenes, and touches of humour are balanced by a sense of the weird and numinous. Arthur Machen is invoked, and that gives you some idea of the overall mood. The main difference is that awe and mystery prevail, without the horrific ideas that drive some of Machen's most powerful stories.

'Desire Path' by John Howard has a slightly Machenesque feel, too. A retired, solitary man of a bookish turn of mind starts to experience odd flashbacks and dreams. He recalls, in fragmentary fashion, childhood experiences that involve a mysterious figure seen in the distance but never close up. This is connected to his walks across an old industrial town in the Midlands (probably), Gradually, things come together, but at the heart of it all is still a mystery. 

'Figures in a Landscape' by Peter Bell follows an academic into Gwent on a quest for a lost hill figure. This one has a distinctly M.R. Jamesian feel, with its focus on college rivalries, the professional aversion to 'crank' ideas, and a gradual unveiling of an ancient mystery. The tone is quite sprightly, and an intriguing plot is enlivened with Bell's excellent descriptive writing. Hill figures are fascinating in themselves, and this story only adds to their allure. Although, as the denouement reveals, you can get too close to a problem.

'The April Rainers' by Colin Insole stands in marked contrast to Bell's fairly traditional approach. An epigraph from Hardy tells us we are in old Wessex, and the story begins with a depiction of an ancient, evil force that dominated the region during the last glacial epoch. The nameless evil persists, but is repeatedly checked by the titular ancient fellowship, keepers of knowledge and power. There are enough ideas here for a novel, and the depth of lore and imagination is truly impressive. 

Considered overall, the book is a showcase for four different but equally valid approaches to weird fiction. The one is highly recommended for the discerning collector. It rewards careful reading and reaffirms Sarob's status as one of the best small press publishers of supernatural fiction. 



Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Issue 61 Coming Fairly Soon...

 Contents:

Veuf

Cliff McNish


 

 

 

Bright as a Button

Katherine Haynes


 

 

 

The Women in the Woods

Sam Dawson


 

 

 

Chico Rivera’s Guitar

Tim Jeffreys


 

 

 

The Miniaturist

Steve Rasnic Tem


 

 

 

Hagstone

 

Reggie Chamberlain-King



Cover art by Sam Dawson








Saturday, 20 December 2025

THE WATER BELLS by Charles Wilkinson (Egaeus Press, 2025)

 


I received a review copy of The Water Bells from the author. 

This new collection contains one tale from ST 59, 'Fire and Stick', which I'm sure readers will agree is a first-rate tale of the strange and disturbing. In total TWB offers fifteen stories, and all are of the same high calibre. The illustrations, as astute folk might have noticed, are by Odilon Redon, and are well suited to the tales. Charles Wilkinson's world is an odd one, a liminal but very British domain. It lies, I think, somewhere between Aickman and de la Mare with a strong dash of M.R. James. 

A recurring them here is the solitary or somewhat awkward individual - usually male - who finds himself a fish out of water. Thus Theo Dodds who, having 'done nothing with his life for three years', is sent to care for a dying relative in 'Absent Below the Lip'. The title more than hints at horrors to come as Theo discovers - far too late - just what his uncle was and did. 


Sunday, 7 December 2025

The Guild of St. Leon & St. Irvyne - by Cardinal Cox

 


Another poetry pamphlet from the laureate of the fens, Pete Cox. This one contains a handful of works on a mysterious medieval outfit founded by one Hugh Bardolph. The guild 'oversaw the construction and consecration (in 1235) of the so-called Dean's Eye' - a rose window in Lincoln Cathedral. Among other things...

The first poem deals with the imps of Lincoln and their role in the earthquake of 1185. Apparently 'their interference had been deduced/By mages skilled in ancient scrying art'. Which was a good thing, as 'holy magics' could be 'unloosed' on the little blighters. The imps turned to gargoyles. Serves 'em right.

'Hugh Bardolph and the Dragon' is a nice anecdote about the eponymous chap in his youth, arriving at court with what he claimed was the head of a dragon. Dinosaur fossil? Perhaps. As the poem reveals, Henry II and his advisors were not mugs. Hugh admits it's a fair cop...

'I found the skull among the rocks and sand

And then brought it here to the royal court

I meant to entertain with my tale and

Did not expect to be so quickly caught.'

Hugh would do well on Facebook, TikTok, or YouTube, the happy hunting grounds of every clickbait-hungry grifter pushing crackpot theories. 

'Tommy Lindrum and the Devil' is a tall tale featuring a cat being let out of a bag - literally. It's all about a confrontation between Old Nick and a wizard who offers up his soul in return for a causeway. The Devil is happy to oblige with some major engineering works. To be fair, he does have help.

'So some small imps mixed cobbles far away

Some tiny imps surveyed the sodden fen

Two imps argued over hourly pay

But each imp did the work of twenty men'

Getting payment for all this proves problematic for DevilCorp. Tommy Lindrum, who I imagine as a kind of working-class Gandalf, wins the game and 'just laughed at the evil one'. I'd never heard of this particular Tommy, but he was clearly the man for sigils and tomes. 

There are also some shorter poems, among which is 'Uproar in the Woods', which I particularly like. It tells of Herla and the Wild Hunt, riding 'upon horses and black he-goats'. There are copious notes to this one, and it seems the spectral hunters were very busy in East Anglia. But it was near Hereford that they met their match in 1155 in the form of a Welshman who 'accosted them' and forced them into the River Wye, where they promptly vanished. One Welshman took down King Herla and his boys? I suspect nationalist propaganda. 

The final poem concerns 'deep places - by the hollow lands' where sacrifices were made to a Snake Idol. The Guild frees the boggarts, victims of evil sorcery. Apparently in 1996 West Deeping saw the discovery of leaden tablets bearing the names of Gnostic Archons. This is all way above my pay grade but I find it all convincing. Suffice to say, these are poems garlanded with esoteric knowledge.


If you would like to learn more about Hugh and the Guild, send an SAE to Cardinal Cox at:

58 Pennington
Orton Goldhay
Peterborough
PE2 5RB


Saturday, 25 October 2025

Cover and internal art for ST 60

 



Sam Dawson's cover and internal art for Steve Duffy's upcoming story 'Valparaiso'.

Definitely not AI-generated. 

ST will never use any form of AI content. 



Saturday, 27 September 2025

A MIND TURNED IN UPON ITSELF: Writings on J.S. Le Fanu by Jim Rockhill (Swan River Press 2025)

 


Literary criticism is not everyone's cup of green tea, but this book is essential for anyone who loves the works of Sheridan Le Fanu. The bulk of the text consists of three introductions Jim Rockhill wrote for 1990s Ash-Three collections, now long out of print. Rockhill has updated what are very substantial essays, and added some extra matter pertaining to the author and his life. 

And what a life it was. The first essay, 'As On a Darkling Plain' covers the period 1814- 1861. On the face of it this seems a little odd, as Le Fanu died in 1873. But, as I read on, I came to realise that before the 1860s the author had occupied himself with a wide range of activities, of which writing was just one. Politics, the law, and family life all demanded his time and effort. He married, fathered four children, then in 1858 suffered the terrible blow of his wife's death. It was only then that Le Fanu took to writing full-time to pay off debts and provide for his offspring. 

Overall, the first essay is a good biographical piece and sets Le Fanu firmly in the context of a troubled society. The descendant of Protestant immigrants, Le Fanu was part of a privileged elite but also felt his position to be precarious. He flirted with nationalism and wrote sympathetically of the native Irish. But after the turbulence of the 1840s he retreated from the 'Young Ireland' movement that had attempted a full-on uprising. 

EVERY PLACE UNLIKE HOME by Charles Wilkinson (Zagava 2026)

  On the top floor of a converted warehouse, the restaurant is a discreet venue, well away from the established haunts of the political powe...