Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Book Review: Angel Down by Daniel Kraus

 


Angel Down by Daniel Kraus

304 pages, Hardcover
Published July 29, 2025 by Atria Books
 

To say this is a bold and ambitious horror novel might be the understatement of the year; to me, this is the bold kind of masterpiece that puts it in the realm of next-level art house horror like Due’s The Reformatory or SGJ’s Buffalo Hunter Hunter. The fact that Kraus and Jones both released novels that any normal year would be a guarantee for a Stoker is a healthy sign for the genre in general.

An argument could be made that this novel is as much a fantasy or a historical war novel as it is a horror novel.  It is all those things, and at the same time, an experimental narrative style.  If you don’t know the experiment, the idea that Daniel Kraus was working with was a novel that was all one sentence. If the majority of the text is a total block of words that is daunting, so before you hell no this book, understand there are what amount to paragraphs and chapters. This makes for an easier experience for the reader, but I was ready to be challenged.  I get it, one time I wanted to publish a novella with a chapter that counted down to chapter one and then zero, a trick that Nolan and Johnson did with Logan’s Run back in the day. My editor on that anthology insisted that it would confuse the reader.

My experience with Angel Down is I forgot about it fairly quickly. Much like reading a novel in first person, if it is a good enough story, I will forget. The flow of the novel is such that once I got into the story, I was sold and engaged. The way the narrative rolls through it feels cinematic and immersive. 

Set during the Great War (AKA WW I), Cyril Bagger has avoided the terrible trenches and no man’s land by lying and forcing himself into duty away from the lines.  His father was a preacher, judgmental, maybe a bit conman. It is amazing how much backstory into the characters we get. This is another treat of the narrative I was surprised by. 

As the novel gets going, Bagger and his squad have to rescue a friend across the battlefield.  There, they make a shocking discovery in the middle of the field. 

As the title implies, it is a spiritual being, and the introduction of the character is emotionally powerful, as I was hoping.  What this sign means is different for everyone involved, and the source of the tension Kraus builds throughout the rest of the novel.

 

“…And then for their sins, the Angel does it, an Angel is how Bagger will think of the woman from now on, for good, forever, he wishes he could gravel before her for having doubted, for when the Angel opens her mouth at the last strike of the nozzle kind of bagger realizes She's never opened her mouth before, her cryptic smiles have never been tight lipped, and inside are no white teeth, no pink palette, only the light that has bled through her all along, only this time in concentrate IP on white a uterine passage into another round…”

A one-of-a-kind reading experience that is a good reminder, after centuries of published novels, there is still original stuff to be down. Angel Down is a fantastic work of dark fantasy and horror. A living, breathing question about the morality of war, something the greatest war novels of history have always done. This is a great war novel, as much as a great horror novel. Great stuff.

Sunday, November 16, 2025

Book Review: Master of Starlight by DW Ardern

 


Master of Starlight by DW Arden

170 pages, Paperback
Expected publication November 18, 2025 by Stalking Horse Press
 

One of the hit-or-miss things about being a podcaster and a critic is that I often get books sent to me by authors I have never heard of before. Sometimes it is clear the publisher didn’t really understand who they were sending an epic fantasy to. Thankfully, that was not the case this time. Stalking Horse Press is the publishing arm of James Reich and he knew exactly what he was doing when sending this book. 

Marketed as a novella, Master of Starlight is a beautiful, lyrical love letter to the night sky. You know who is passionate about the night sky - this guy. I mean, there is an actual love story, and some of the best is when the loves are blurred.

I don’t know a thing about DW Arden that I didn’t learn from his website, a reporter a improv sketch comedian.  I am not sure any of that plays a role in the short but powerful book. For such a short book, it feels epic and massive in scope at times despite being short in page count.  Master of Starlight is the story of Oliver, an astronomer and stoner whose adventures start in the 70s.  His love for the stars was only relieved by Vera.

 “How much of his life had he spent alone, contemplating the mysteries of the cosmos coated in the stars? Existing somewhere between here and there, floating through life in a liminal space between the theoretical and actual, the imagined and the real, his mind analyzing all horizons, steering between all possible paths, all possible futures, detached from the anchored president of his body, the earth, the soil, and the sand. He had not cared until he met her. He had been content to live out his days as a radical philosopher of the stars, in exile in his heretical beliefs. And then the supernova of her eyes had set off a chain reaction of explosions, implosions, and formations that altered his orbit forever, drawn toward those thousand Suns in her gaze, the light of which seemed to dispel dark matter from the deepest parts of herself.”

The philosophical asides were my favorite parts…

“This place, earth, our goldilocks home in a perfect orbit around the sun -”

“A lucky accident.”

“Does that make it any less amazing? The serendipity of life, the evolution of all the curious little creatures contemplating for competing for survival, the astonishing phenomenon of human consciousness, the rapid genesis of languages, ideas, and civilization.” Vera raised her beer in honor of the stars. “We are witnesses of the miracle. What difference does our judgment of it make? The fact that we even have the cognitive power to question existence that's significant, miraculous, that matters.

What is amazing about this book is despite Oliver traveling around the globe, the novel feels as rooted in the stars above (or below, that distinction is meaningless in space). It is what seems a simple tale, Oliver has a rival in science who he feels prevented a relationship with fellow Astronomer Vera, but a stargazing trip into the wilderness might change everything.

The story did quite match for me the power of lyrical prose describing the night sky. There are plenty of darkly comical moments.

Book Review: ECO24: The Year's Best Speculative Ecofiction Edited by Marissa Van Uden

 

ECO24: The Year's Best Speculative Eco-fiction Edited by Marissa Van Uden

312 pages, Paperback
Expected publication: November 18, 2025 by Violet Lichen Books

I did not realize that there is enough Sci-fi and horror fiction on the theme of ecology to fill a yearÅ› best anthology, but it is better than that. Eco24  is filled to the brim with powerful and entertaining stories. Speculative fiction is uniquely positioned to explore the nature of our fragile relationship to the only planet in the cosmos that we depend on for life.  The fantastic Marissa Van Uden has built a collection of stories that demand attention and warn of futures we can still avoid, if we listen.  A must-read.

So I am not going to go super deep, except to highlight some of my favorite stories here. I enjoyed pretty much everything I read, but these were the stand-outs.

A strange but powerful story The Water Runner by Eugen Bacon  had a novel’s worth of ideas and creative energy. “The job in area C was suicide; What made a father of seven kill himself? Everything. In this waterless world that paid in credits that never lasted but dissolved unstretched in a grueling economy - everything. One simply lost faith. Even though the father was outwardly perfect, rigamortis in a fetal curl of dying agony, she had to say no. The man had swallowed rust remover. His water compromised.” Damn

Time travel exploring a look at the wake of our culture…Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackened Husk of a Planet By Adeline Wong: “Open loop time dynamics says the moment you leave here, the time plane changes. It folds around you, for you, based on how you experience and your observations inform your future actions they will have been.”

In the category of gruesome and bothered me the most…Bodies by Cat McMahan “That our plant we only produce one kind of chicken; But diogenis ten. Sometime in the early 21st century, a man genetically engineered a featherless chicken, one that was fat and lazy and couldn't regulate its own temperature. A lack of feathers saved on cooling costs. Then in the 20 thirties they made it leaner the new angle was that it was healthier to eat, clean to slaughter. in 2040 they removed the synrinx at the bottom of its trachea, it's voice box and genetically modified it to require forty percent less chicken feed it couldn't wail or want.”

As a 30-year vegan and an Animal liberationist, this story gave me fix feelings and the hee-bee-jee-bees. Good stuff with several ethical issues to ponder.

The story Pig House by Kay Vaindal was very evocative and at times reminded me of a Brian Evenson story. ¨ When the power goes out, whole cities die. Your rebreather stops pulling oxygen and if it zeroes before you can change it, suffocation. He gave into your lungs the useless air. Deep breath, nothing. And another and another period aunt Beth died that way when Rochester went out. That was the fifteenth biggest one in the states - Rochester. ¨

In the fictionalizing solutions category, I enjoyed The Plasticity of Being by Renan Bernardo. “Once Upon a time, Verdita was the future; The bastion of sustainability and green technology aligned with social and environmental responsibility, a powerful Brazilian then global force to correct everything that was wrong with the world. And indeed they showed what they were all about. In a decade their projects of reforestation employed millions of micro drones in the Amazon rainforest, with tech they healed the damaged soil, planted new trees, and rescued animals during fires all the time leaving patterns of what they were doing, so they could improve themselves over time and avoid catastrophes.”

So here is the point, Eco24 is a harbinger, willed with warnings from diverse authors, styles, and locations. I am excited to read future editions and hope the world starts to listen.