The Blurb On The Back:

Young Victoria McQueen has a gift for finding things. All she has to do is ride her bike through the Shorter Way Bridge and she’ll come out wherever she needs to be … even if that’s hundreds of miles away. But it turns out she’s not the only one with a special ability.

There are others … like Charlie Manx, who takes children to Christmasland in his 1938 Rolls-Royce Wraith with its NOS4R2 vanity plate. Only by the time they get there his passengers have changed, utterly. They’ve become Charlie’s children; as unstoppable and insane as Manx himself.

Only one kid ever escaped Charlie Manx: Vic McQueen. But her first brush with Manx lit the fuse on a life-and-death battle of wills … a battle that explodes a quarter of a century later.

Because Manx has taken Vic’s son. And Vic McQueen is going to get him back.


The Review (Cut For Spoilers): )

The Verdict:

Joe Hill’s festive-themed horror is a blood-chilling take on vampires, family and love that will ensure you never look at Christmas in the same way again. Vic McQueen is a great character – flawed and broken – I loved the contrast between her relationships with her father and her son, Wayne. I also loved her relationship with Lou, an overweight man with a good heart whose love for Vic prevents him from asking questions he needs to. Charlie Manx is also a great villain who’s convinced that he is the hero of his own story, although I would have liked a little more on the psychological effect that the Wraith has on him because for me it was slightly underdeveloped, but what is on the page makes up for that, notably his relationship with the creepy and pathetic Bing who serves as his Renfeld. The star of the book though is Christmasland and specifically what it does to its child inhabitants, which both chilled me and creeped me out and left me unable to listen to Christmas songs. The slow change that comes over Wayne as he’s taken to Christmasland and his attempts to fight it was real eebie jeebie stuff and the final battle was filled with enough thrills and ick to keep horror fans entertained. Ultimately, I thought this was a fun, creepy and effective horror novel with great illustrations by Gabriel Rodriguez that kept me entertained from beginning to end and I’m really looking forward to reading Hill’s next novel.
The Blurb On The Back:

”Buy my stepfather’s ghost, read the email.” So Jude did.


When Judas Coyne heard someone was selling a ghost on the internet, there was no question what he was going to do. It was perfect for his collection of the macabre and the grotesque: the cannibal’s cookbook, the witch’s confession, the authentic snuff movie. As an ageing death-metal-rock-God, buying a ghost almost qualifies as a business expense.

Besides, Jude thinks he knows all about ghosts. Jude has been haunted for years … by the spirits of bandmates dead and gone, the spectre of the abusive father he fled as a child, and the memory of the girl he abandoned, who killed herself. But this ghost is different. Delivered to his doorstep in a black heart-shaped box, the latest addition to Jude’s collection makes the house feel cold. It makes the dogs bark. And it means to chase Jude from his home and make him run for his life …


The Review (Cut For Spoilers): )

The Verdict:

Joe Hill’s breakthrough horror novel has some genuinely creepy moments and slick writing with strong themes of selfishness, guilt and regret. I really enjoyed the shift from domestic haunting to haunted road trip as Judas and his girlfriend, Georgia, go looking for answers from the ghost’s vendor but the resolution in the final quarter didn’t quite manage to pull it all together and I didn’t believe in the reasoning behind the haunting as it seemed to be based on quite a stretch. That said I did enjoy the book and I will definitely be checking out Hill’s other work.

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