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Twisted Anatomy: A Body Horror Anthology Kindle Edition
Hailey Piper (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
Sara Tantlinger (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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Benefitting the Pulmonary Hypertension Association and the National Domestic Violence Hotline, Twisted Anatomy contains new stories from some of the best authors in indie horror and science fiction, alongside several new voices guaranteed to suck readers in for years to come.
Please note: The team at Sci-Fi & Scary strongly believe in content warnings. A list of any story's content warning is located at the back of the book. Everyone should be free to read horror, regardless of past circumstances.
Features Stories By:
Red Lagoe, Jennifer Carstens, Ian Fortey, Allyson Shaw, R.J. Joseph, Madeleine Swann, DL Shirey, Nick Stefan, Tabatha Wood, Andrew Joseph White, Sara Tantlinger, Anne Polcastro, Justin Moritz, Alexander C. Bailey, Michael Morar, J.A.W. McCarthy, Byron Alexander Campbell, Jennifer Lee Rossman, Steve DeGroof, A.K. Dennis, J. Danielle Dorn, Cynthia Pelayo, S.H. Cooper, Laurel Hightower, Carina Bissett, Gabbie Frulla, Patrick Barb, Ian Neligh, Lilyn George, and Hailey Piper
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateFebruary 19, 2021
- File size2958 KB
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Product details
- ASIN : B08TGCND39
- Publisher : Sci-Fi & Scary (February 19, 2021)
- Publication date : February 19, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 2958 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 236 pages
- Lending : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #700,305 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #755 in Horror Anthologies (Kindle Store)
- #1,562 in Horror Anthologies (Books)
- #2,537 in Fiction Anthologies
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Carina Bissett is a writer, poet, and educator working primarily in the fields of dark fiction and fabulism. Her short fiction and poetry have been published in multiple journals and anthologies including Upon a Twice Time, Bitter Distillations: An Anthology of Poisonous Tales, Arterial Bloom, Gorgon: Stories of Emergence, Weird Dream Society, Hath No Fury, and the HWA Poetry Showcase Vol. V, VI, and VIII. She has also written stories set in shared worlds for RPGs at Green Ronin Publishing and Onyx Path Publishing. In addition to writing, she has edited several projects; the most recent is in the role as co-editor for Shadow Atlas: Dark Landscapes of the Americas.
As an educator, Carina has taught at Pikes Peak Community College, Glendale Community College, and Arizona State University. She also participated in the Colorado Writing Project and works with educators to develop writing instruction in college and secondary school classrooms. She currently offers workshops focused on story generation at The Storied Imaginarium. Her fiction has been nominated for the Sundress Publications Best of the Net Award and was a finalist for the Ron L. Hubbard Writers of the Future Awards. Her poetry has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and the Sundress Publications Best of the Net Award. In her editorial capacity, she’s received recognition as a Finalist at the Colorado Book Awards 2022 (Anthology) and as a Finalist in the Fiction: Anthologies category of the 2022 International Book Awards.
Madeleine Swann's novella, The Vine That Ate The Starlet, was published by Filthy Loot. Her collection, Fortune Box (Eraserhead Press), was nominated for a Wonderland Award. Her short stories have appeared in various anthologies and podcasts including Splatterpunk Award nominated The New Flesh: A David Cronenberg Tribute.
Sara Tantlinger is the author of the Bram Stoker Award-winning The Devil’s Dreamland: Poetry Inspired by H.H. Holmes, and the Stoker-nominated works To Be Devoured, Cradleland of Parasites, and Not All Monsters. Along with being a mentor for the HWA Mentorship Program, she is also a co-organizer for the HWA Pittsburgh Chapter. She embraces all things macabre and can be found lurking in graveyards or on Twitter @SaraTantlinger, at saratantlinger.com and on Instagram @inkychaotics
PATRICK BARB is a freelance writer and editor from the southern United States, currently living (and trying not to freeze to death) in Saint Paul, Minnesota. His horror fiction has appeared in HOME (Ghost Orchid Press), SHIVER, HOOKMAN AND FRIENDS (DBND Publishing), and ACROSS THE UNIVERSE: TALES OF ALTERNATIVE BEATLES (Fantastic Books). He is an active member of the Horror Writers Association.
R. J. Joseph is a Stoker Award™ nominated, Texas based writer who earned her MFA in Writing Popular Fiction from Seton Hill University and who must exorcise the demons of her imagination so they don't haunt her being. A life long horror fan and writer of many things, she joyously discovered and embraced writing in the academic arena about three important aspects of of her life: horror, Black femininity, and popular culture. She has had works published in various venues, including the Halloween issue of Southwest Review and The Streaming of Hill House: Essays on the Haunting Netflix Series. When she isn't writing, reading, or teaching, she can usually be found wrangling her huge blended family of one husband, four adult sprouts, seven teenaged sproutlings, four grandboo seedlings, and one furry hellbeast who sometimes pretends to be a dog.
When R. J. isn't writing, teaching, or reading voraciously, she can usually be found wrangling one of various sprouts or sproutlings from her blended family of 11...along with one husband and one hellbeast that masquerades as a dog sometimes. R.J. is also an instructor at The Speculative Fiction Academy and a co-host of the Genre Blackademia podcast.
R. J. can be found lurking (and occasionally even peeking out) on social media:
Twitter: @rjacksonjoseph
Facebook: facebook.com/rhonda.jacksonjoseph
Facebook official: fb.me/rhondajacksonjosephwriter
Instagram: @rjacksonjoseph
Blog: https://rjjoseph.wordpress.com/
Email: horrorblackademic@gmail.com
Website: www.rhondajacksonjoseph.com
Hailey Piper is the Bram Stoker Award-winning author of Queen of Teeth, The Worm and His Kings, Your Mind Is a Terrible Thing, Unfortunate Elements of My Anatomy, Benny Rose the Cannibal King, and The Possession of Natalie Glasgow. She is an active member of the Horror Writers Assocation, with dozens of short stories appearing in Pseudopod, Vastarien, Dark Matter Magazine, Daily Science Fiction, and other publications. An avid reader and lifelong Godzilla fangirl, she nowadays lives with her wife in Maryland, where their paranormal research is classified.
Find more about Hailey Piper's work at www.haileypiper.com or follow her on Twitter via @HaileyPiperSays.
Ian Fortey wrote this biography in the third person. He also writes horror stories, comedy articles, and can cook a ham like a champ.
Alexander C. Bailey is a newer author, from Iowa. Currently he has only short stories published, but is planning on publishing more in the coming days.
If you like to get know Alexander follow him on Twitter @AlexFromIA
DL Shirey lives in Portland, Oregon, where it's probably raining. Luckily, water is beer’s primary ingredient. His stories and non-fiction appear in over 70 publications, including Confingo, Page & Spine, Zetetic and Wild Musette. Most of the publications listed here on Amazon are anthologies containing his work.
You can find more of his writing at www.dlshirey.com and @dlshirey on Twitter.
And to those who've asked, the cat's name is Frisbee.
A.K. Dennis doesn’t sleep well at night and has the dark circles to prove it. She loves the horror genre, but only if it’s the written word—she’s too much of a scaredy cat to sit through a scary movie, even as an adult (though she is getting better). A.K. lives with her horror movie-loving husband and their young son in the Midwest. You can follow her on Twitter @AKDennis_author
Riya Anne Polcastro is the author of numerous books including Jane, Dentata, and the forthcoming Spanglish young adult novel Popcorn 4 Dinner, Traff'kd @ Midnight (Palomitas Para Cena, Traficado en la Madrugada). She lives in the Pacific NorthWest where she enjoys taking photographs of dead things.
S.H. Cooper is a Florida based, multi-genre author with a focus on horror and fantasy. Her titles include the Victorian gothic novella, INHERITING HER GHOSTS, the cosmic horror novella, THE FESTERING ONES, and the YA fantasy novel, THE KNIGHT'S DAUGHTER, in addition to three short story collections and the horror comedy podcast, Calling Darkness. She is also a regular contributor to the award winning anthology series, The NoSleep Podcast. When not writing, she enjoys spending time with her husband, pets, and a cup of Earl Grey.
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Since there are 29 stories, I’m not going to touch on all of them. Just a few notes here and there. There are great stories about possibly fictitious ailments, unending floods of menstrual blood, swallowed leeches of a kind. Some of the stories are really incredibly creative takes on body horror, such as R.J. Joseph’s “Witness Bearer,” in which a woman takes people’s stories into her being… along with their eyes. Another favorite–“Apis Facticius: Or, The Queen Cell” by Michael Morar–is both science fiction and insect horror, and it’s really fascinating. One gene-altering story with dinosaurs (“The Real Jurassic Park Was the Gender Dysphoria We Felt Along the Way,” by Jennifer Lee Rossman) does an excellent job of conveying the feeling that happens when you’re sure that what you are on the outside doesn’t match what you are on the inside.
There are some apocalypse-type stories, although the focus is on individual horrors (a community of “changed” people in one, mysterious bodily mutations in another, odd “worms” in a sci-fi space story). There’s a bizarre story (“Under the Avatars” by D.L. Shirey) that squicked me more than most! It involves people who communicate online using complex avatars to hide what they look like, and what’s behind those avatars. There’s at least one mad scientist story, and one story about mysterious “supplements” that have unexpected effects on the body. Another story (Steve DeGroof’s “All In Your Head”) took some delightful turns as its protagonist constantly hears a bizarre noise that his wife says is all in his head.
As usual, I’m particularly fond of Laurel Hightower’s work. I’ll just say that her character Elise keeps hearing sobbing sounds throughout her life, and it turns out to be something amazing. She really makes it easy to empathize with her characters. A fairy tale type story (kind of a blend of the Little Mermaid and Bluebeard, only not) by Carina Bissett was just utterly fantastic. It’s probably not surprising that there’s also a touch of cosmic horror in this book, because extra eyes, a few tentacles, or mysterious extra teeth make for great body horror material. Speaking of which, the Lilyn George story that kicked off this whole project–let’s just say, vagina tentacles are involved–is delightful and oddly fun. The final story, Hailey Piper’s “Succubus Tips for Succu-Bliss” is a totally fun “guide” to being bound to a “vagina monster.” It discusses such topics as respect and trust, dietary needs, hygiene, love, and so forth. It’s a total delight.
There’s at least one story where I was just totally confused as to what happened and thus left feeling quite unsatisfied, but that didn’t happen as often in this anthology as it seems to overall in horror anthologies. In contrast, Sara Tantlinger’s “Unspooling Screams” left me not really knowing what happened as well, but achieved something unusual–it was internally satisfying enough that I didn’t mind that.
A couple of the stories are horrifying, but then end on a flippant note, and that undermines what they achieved. One is just bizarre in ways that don’t appeal to me (“Ruck Johnson and the Curse of the Concomitant Foreskin,” by Byron Alexander Campbell, and I’m betting that you can tell by the title whether you’re likely to find it interesting). Another story that’s an odd take on a fairy tale was just too short for me to get emotionally invested in it.
Really I have so few complaints about this book. Even the stories that were a little “off” to me, like those ones that end a little flippantly or confusingly, were still good stories. And unusually for short horror stories, I didn’t feel that any of these tales ended too soon. I highly recommend this anthology to anyone who has an interest in body horror!
Here are some of my highlights:
I loved Teeth by Tabatha Wood. Teeth bother me. Just the idea of these hard little pointy nubs growing from soft pink flesh....ugh. I loved the idea of this very powerful, famous woman coming undone by an innocuous body part. It also reminded me of the monster in the first season of Channel Zero. Which gave me a reoccurring nightmare for weeks.
Unspooling Screams by Sara Tantlinger...again with the mouth and teeth. But I had a much different feeling with this one. Mouths sewn shut are horrifying physically, but also trying to stop someone from speaking their truth...that’s the real horror. I felt vindicated at the end!
Just Beneath Her Skin by S.H. Cooper was a personal one for me. It was lovely in a terrible way and spoke to the immense pain of losing a baby. What if the pain was to manifest itself physically?
I just picked a few stories that really left me thinking or I felt personally connected too. However all the stories were wonderful. I’ll be reading more body horror, even if it’s teeth, and definitely more from the authors in this book!
There is a lot to digest and experience in this collection, with some stories going hard-out with real dark, body-shock, and others offering a more subtle, disturbing brand of horror. With thirty stories to choose from, there is bound to be a good number that hit the mark. Stories of note that I really enjoyed: Witness Bearer by R.J. Joseph, Cul-De-Sac of the Affected by Madeleine Swann, The Foal with Two Heads by Andrew Joseph White, Unspooling Screams by Sara Tantlinger, Lamb’s Lettuce by Cynthia Pelayo and Just Beneath Her Skin by S.H. Cooper.
With all profits going to support the Pulmonary Hypertension Association and the National Domestic Violence Hotline, this is a superb addition to any body horror collection.
There's a little bit of everything in there. Blood and gore and guts and eyes and tentacles and teeth.
So many, many teeth.
If that sounds like your cup of tea - there are several cups of tea in there as well - you won't be disappointed.
Horrified? Definitely.
Amused? Probably.
Grossed out? Quite possibly.
But not disappointed.
Disclaimer: I'm one of the contributors to this anthology.
Top reviews from other countries

Twisted Anatomy comes from the Sci-Fi & Scary review site, consisting of thirty stories brimming with ick and ew. If the human body already disgusts you, just wait until you delve into what these authors have to offer with their copious amounts of gore and body horror. I’d consider myself the target audience due to my particular tastes, therefore many of the stories appealed to me, even moving me with their deeper meaning – yes, it’s possible for a beautiful idea to include stomach-churning content. There were still a few misses along the way, but it was to be expected with such a large variety. What’s even more great, is that all profits from the book are donated to the Pulmonary Hypertension Association, as well as the National Domestic Violence Hotline.
The Flavour of Life by Ian Fortey depicted a horrific transformation after an unfortunate dip, while the oddly beautiful Witness Bearer by R.J. Joseph told of a girl with thousands of eyes. Cul-De-Sac of the Affected by Madeleine Swann stood out as memorable due to its grotesque yet touching community, and Prey Eyes by Nick Stefan took the reforming of criminals to the next level. These are only a few I enjoyed, it’d be too much to list every single one. Just trust me, if you like being grossed out, then look no further.
My top three:
Blood Bogged by Red Lagoe – A biblical-level flow that she imagined would drown the world if it didn’t stop.
Erin struggles with a great deal of pain, her body desperate to expel her trauma. The bloodiest and most disgusting story of all, but not because of its subject matter – consider me well versed in the gory details of menstruation. It was the level of writing and sheer volume, every description leaving little to the imagination. It’s not often that I come across any mention of women having their periods in what I read, even when the main character is female, almost like it’s the elephant in the room that nobody wants to acknowledge. Lagoe more than made up for that, though.
Little Teeth by Tabatha Wood – They were there, in her bones, waiting to erupt.
Katy discovers a lump in her mouth, which leads to an urgent dental appointment. Everyone has nightmares about teeth, right? I know I do, mostly about losing them, while this one shot to the opposite extreme. I couldn’t look away from the page, morbid fascination taking over. What began as a mild irritation for the main character turned deliciously dark, with an ending that left me wanting more.
All in Your Head by Steve DeGroof – They followed him wherever he went, burrowing into his skull, tormenting him.
A sound only he can hear disrupts Isaac’s idyllic life with his wife. This one went places, and despite catching on fairly quickly as to what was happening, I still enjoyed it a great deal. It had a solid idea that was well executed, so much so that the concept struck me as something that could be suited to a full-length novel. It’s also an example of how diverse the anthology was.
In conclusion: There’s a lot of ways the human body can be used as a means to disturb and horrify, and the anthology by Sci-Fi & Scary, aptly named Twisted Anatomy, takes advantage of just that. With eyes, teeth, mouths and tentacles, it was a lot to swallow, yet worth it if being disgusted is your jam.
© Red Lace 2021