Saturday, August 30, 2025
Joyride (Video Review)
Friday, August 29, 2025
Your Body Will Never Be Found
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
Night of the Black Frost
Norwegian young adult Leif has just graduated high school and is in that life-lull deciding how to spend his time prior to college. His friends convince him to tour Europe for months, but Leif's father has another plan. He'll support and pay Leif's way to northwest to the Barents Sea, a frigid wasteland of ice between the Arctic Ocean and Russia. He convinces Leif to spend a few weeks with his uncles, Peder and Jan, on their commercial fishing expeditions. Leif, longing for adventure and maturity, accepts.
Onboard his uncle's fishing trawler, Leif experiences a harrowing two-day adventure. His Uncle Peder is hesitant about Leif's participation in the dangerous fishing expedition. Uncle Jan is a bit more patient and understanding. For Leif, his endurance and stamina is tested when two Russian pilots plunge into the frosty ocean in an accident. When Peder and Jan attempt a rescue they become lost at sea. It is up to Leif to run the trawler, make a rescue of his uncles and the pilots, while enduring a black frost (when fog turns to ice).
This 166-page book was a short perfect example of what Catherall does so well – nautical adventure storytelling that features ordinary young people facing life-threatening adult decisions that accelerates their maturity and personal growth. As I always preach in these reviews, throw out the stigma of young adult. The book has an intense survival element with some gritty life choices including possible amputation of a leg, frostbite, hypothermia, and a very personal conflict facing one of the Russian pilots. There's turmoil and intrigue involving the Russian government and their interaction with these Norwegian fishermen.
Night of the Black Frost is a fantastic adventure that showcases everything I love about this captivating author. If you like books in the style of Hammond Innes (The White South comes to mind) then look no further than this must-read. Highly recommended.
Monday, August 25, 2025
Paperback Warrior - Episode 124
Saturday, August 23, 2025
Paperback Warrior Primer - Mack Bolan
Friday, August 22, 2025
The Burial of the Rats
Surprisingly, despite the morbid title, “The Burial of the Rats” isn't quite a horror story. It is more of a dark, man-on-the-run flavor that would find its readership in the pages of a men's action-adventure magazine than a horror anthology. It would be 28 more years before Richard Connell Jr. set the standard for “men hunting men” in his marvelous romp "The Most Dangerous Game", but Stoker's early effort helps shape the formula. According to oldstyletales.com, predating both Stoker and Connell Jr. was the man-on-the-run thriller “An Occurance at Owl Creek Bridge” by Ambrose Bierce, “The Suicide Club” by Robert Louis Stevenson, and Rudyard Kipling's “The Man Who Would be King”.
In Stoker's rather simple story, an unnamed British narrator wants to marry his sweetheart. However, the parents want him to spend a year apart from her, a 12-month journey that places the dejected narrator in Paris. He finds himself in a bad part of town where trash is heaped and the poverty-ridden populace squats in makeshift, unconventional housing. It is here that the narrator sees six veteran soldiers, now tattered in rags and scruffy uniforms, watching him like a hawk.
Lost, he stops to ask for directions from an old woman. She tells him of her life, and, while she talks, the narrator sees large rats swarming all over. She explains a horrible personal experience of venturing into the sewer once to retrieve a lost ring and of the rats there that would suck flesh from bones in an instant. Vaguely, the narrator then hears (or thinks?) the woman call out to the soldiers to help her kill the young traveler. In a quest to survive the night, the narrator then takes off on foot through this kingdom of rubble and trash to escape his pursuers.
Stoker had a unique fascination with rats and used them quite often to set a type of warning that man's existence is perpetually haunted, or hunted, by a predator. Rats scurrying about is a frightening and disturbing image, but even with this appalling element, Stoker manages to eek by with a storytelling ability that is wholly steeped in an adventure. The story's second half is a furious run as the narrator attempts to escape the clutches of this maddened group of scrawny and starved ex-soldiers. The atmosphere and visual imagery of the city – this wasteland of debris and its King and Queen Squatters – is a character all to itself. For me, this is the real highlight of the book – the visual imagery of this awful place.
You can get this story and others by Bram Stoker HERE.
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
The Lurking Fear
“The Lurking Fear” is a stand-alone story that doesn't fit Lovecraft's vast Cthulhu mythos. It begins with an unnamed narrator exploring Tempest Mountain, a supposedly cursed region in New York's Catskills. This narrator, a monster-hunter of sorts, and his two male companions, are responding to reports of creatures attacking people in the nearby area. Central to the narrator's investigation is a derelict mansion void of any residents. It is here that the trio take refuge to wait out the night. But, in the deep recesses of the dark, the narrator is awakened to see a large shadow on the chimney wall and the disappearance of his two companions.
The narrator leaves the mansion and, after several days, returns to the mansion again with a journalist named Munroe. This time, the duo take shelter from a rainstorm in a nearby shack near the mansion's grounds. It is here that Munroe is killed by a terrible mauling and the narrator searches for answers in a discarded diary the two had previously located.
In the story's second half, the narrator reveals the history of the mansion and a reclusive family known as the Martenses that turned to inbreeding in their rural isolation. Thinking he has found the answers to the creatures, and their mysterious attacks, the narrator returns to the property again and begins to dig up the grave of Jan Martense. Under the casket he locates a labyrinth of underground tunnels used by the creatures. But, like any good horror story, the clash between man and beast brings resolution.
“The Lurking Fear” has a disjointed presentation which Lovecraft himself was disappointed with. The reason may have been the serial nature of the story and the need to expand it into several issues. Regardless, I enjoyed the aura of isolation, the unbridled tragedy affecting this early American family, and the narrator's gusto to confront the monstrosities despite the prior casualties that closely affected him. There's an atmosphere of foreboding that permeates the abandoned mansion and grounds. There's also this idea that death itself can reveal answers, apparent in the very physical need to look beneath the casket for answers.
In terms of legacy, I can see shades of this story in film franchises like Hills Have Eyes and Wrong Turn, the classic 1981 film Hell Night, as well as stories by Stephen King like “Graveyard Shift”. Lovecraft, who remained an “unknown” in his lifetime, touched so many generations of horror fans. His influence on the genre is seemingly endless.










