Dark Tide Vol. 8: Against The Clock

Dark Tide Vol. 8- Against The Clock HORROR BOOK REVIEW .png

Filled with twists, turns and terror, Against The Clock ticks down to zero hour with panache, class and suspenseful style, and deserves a space on the bookshelf of any respecting genre fan. Graded individually, Gunnells’ ‘Septic’ receives top-billing with the full 5 (out of 5) on my Fang Scale

BOOK REVIEW: Dark Tide Vol. 8: Against The Clock

Tales of Mystery and Suspense by: Mark Allan Gunnells, Shane Nelson, and Brandon Ford; Crystal Lake Publishing, 220 Pages, Available Now on Amazon

Review by Damascus Mincemeyer

On the storytelling family tree, suspense and horror are shoots of the same literary branch, attached to a common trunk and rooted in our primitive collective reptilian brain. That sense of disquieting tension one feels when watching Clarice Starling wade through the murky pitch darkness of Buffalo Bill’s death house plucks a chord deep within our psyche, reminding us of a time when our distant, primal ancestors braved untamed wilds on a daily basis. 

In comparison to our ancient forebearers, humankind presently exists in a time and place of relative comfort. The dangers to our existence are no longer a stalking saber-toothed tiger or once-incurable pathogens, but rather stem, mostly, from each other. Humanity’s inhumanity towards itself is an ever-present menace, one that can safely be explored and examined in fictional form. That such tales trigger a pleasant burst of palpitant adrenaline is a generous side-effect, and explains their enduring popularity. But what, exactly, is the difference between suspense and horror? Where does the line delineating one end and the other begin?

A subsidiary to their bread-and-butter mainstay of horror releases, Crystal Lake Publishing has ventured into the realms of suspense and mystery with their Dark Tide series, the eighth of which, entitled Against The Clock, consists of three novellas by different writers seeking to answer that very question with dread-inducing results.

Lucid author Mark Allan Gunnells’ ‘80’s-set nail-biter, ‘Septic’, opens the volume in taut fashion. It focuses on Carl, the only male teenager on his high school’s cheerleading squad, whose worsening stomachache inadvertently leads him to become trapped in one of the campus bathrooms after the door’s faulty lock breaks. Imprisoned alone, Carl’s plight turns desperate once he realizes his gastrointestinal distress is due not to food poisoning, but a burst appendix. Will his concerned friends be able to convince others that Carl’s absence is in need of investigating, or will he succumb to sepsis before help arrives?

The second entry, ‘Subscription Due’, Shane Nelson’s surreal, paranoia-drenched Kafka-esque labyrinth of conspiracies and otherworldly entities, is far afield from Gunnells’ reality-based thriller yet nonetheless ratchets up the anxiety with each passing page. When writer Rupert Seville receives a bill for a magazine he never subscribed to, it begins a journey into an abyss of living photographs, unearthly hitmen and an increasingly bizarre plot that reaches back through the generations of Rupert’s bloodline.    

‘Pixelated’ by Brandon Ford, rounds out the trilogy with the genuinely unsettling slow-burn tale of Tanner, a man who inherits his late grandfather’s house in a shabby south Philly neighborhood. At first overwhelmed by a nostalgic wave from times spent there as a latch-key kid during his youth, Tanner soon becomes drawn into a nightmare when he discovers a cache of ancient VHS tapes that may prove his loving grandfather was secretly a stone-cold serial murderer.

All the novellas in Against The Clock are engrossing, superbly satisfying pressure-cookers of excitement, though each achieves that distressing state in decidedly diverse ways. Of the three, only author Gunnells creates what could be considered an authentic suspense yarn; utilizing the ‘countdown’ theme to full effect, he masterfully orchestrates Carl’s plight from the first line, then increasingly stacks the odds against him, with the teen’s appendicitis acting as a deadly timing device. That’s not to say the other two entries don’t succeed in their aim to perturb the audience—far from it. Nelson’s unconventional ‘Subscription Due’ channels Stephen King in the best of ways, as the progressively perplexing situation evolves into a violent fight for survival for Rupert and his wife; of particular note are the two Tommy Gun-toting assassins, Seven and Nine, incessantly creepy creatures who finish each other’s sentences and have a keen knack for torture. ‘Pixelated’, in contrast, fosters suspense in starkly subtle ways. The plot’s main thrust—the discovery of a collection of gruesome home-videos—is fondly reminiscent of the V/H/S film series, and builds its tension steadily, relying on mood and the memories of its lead to weave an inescapable cocoon of madness. The main strength here is Ford’s skillful characterization of his protagonist: Tanner is crafted with easily relatable detail, and once the revelation of his grandfather’s nature is unveiled his subsequent descent into darkness, while slightly predictable, is a sincerely disturbing experience.

Filled with twists, turns and terror, Against The Clock ticks down to zero hour with panache, class and suspenseful style, and deserves a space on the bookshelf of any respecting genre fan. Graded individually, Gunnells’ ‘Septic’ receives top-billing with the full 5 (out of 5) on my Fang Scale, with Ford’s ‘Pixelated’ meriting a close second with a 4.5 (out of 5). Last, but not remotely least, Nelson’s ‘Subscription Due’ earns itself a concrete 4 (out of 5), and Against The Clock as a whole garners a near-perfect 4.5 (out of 5). Recommended reading for a dark and stormy night. Just don’t forget to breathe.

Dark Tide Vol. 8: Against The Clock

Dark Tide Vol. 8: Against The Clock

Three suspenseful mystery novellas with a dark edge…

Septic by Mark Allan Gunnells: The year is 1988. When Carl finds himself trapped in a school bathroom with a faulty lock over Christmas break, things seem bad. When the pain in his abdomen increases and he realizes his appendix has burst, things get worse. Can he manage to free himself in time?

Subscription Due by Shane Nelson: Rupert Seville is living an idyllic life. A successful writer married to an amazing woman, everything seems to have fallen into place. But when a strange notice arrives in the mail, Rupert’s idyllic world is turned upside down. It is a “Subscription Due” notice for a magazine to which he’s never subscribed. Beneath the surface, it is far more than that and the arrival of two violent men with murder on their minds only makes it clearer. Rupert doesn’t know it, but the amount he owes is far more than he’s able to pay. The past itself has come due, and Rupert has no idea of the terror about to be unleashed. When the world he thinks he knows begins to unravel and the truth of the past catches up to him, it is up to Rupert Seville to find a way to settle old debts and escape a horror that isn’t of this world.

Pixelated by Brandon Ford: After the passing of his grandfather, Tanner returns to his hometown to clean out the property willed to him. However, what he finds holds the key to an unsolved crime decades-old and shows just how little he knew of his former father figure.

This novella anthology is perfect for fans of mystery and suspense books, thrillers, small town mysteries, unsolved crimes, and a bit of horror.

Proudly represented by Crystal Lake Publishing—Tales from the Darkest Depths.

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Author

  • Jim Mcleod

    Jim "The Don" Mcleod has been reading horror for over 35 years, and reviewing horror for over 16 years. When he is not spending his time promoting the horror genre, he is either annoying his family or mucking about with his two dogs Casper and Molly.

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