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Berkeley Heights Public Library Reference Section Magazines Children's Department
Berkeley Heights Public Library

While the Black Stars Burn

by Lucy A. Snyder

Publishers Weekly Malevolent lineages and emotionally fraught familial relationships propel the plots of most of the 13 genre-spanning stories in Snyder's strong collection. In "Approaching Lavender," a woman paints a self-portrait according to her needy husband's instructions and finds that she has created a doppelganger who threatens her existence. In the diptych formed by "The Abomination of Fensmere" and "The Girl with the Star-Stained Soul," a young girl who visits her long-estranged family on her mother's side is appalled to learn that she's being groomed as a conduit for the liberation of Lovecraftian horrors. The title tale concerns a violinist who discovers that the sonatas written for her by her abusive father are tools for trapping her in a nightmarish otherworld. Snyder (Soft Apocalypses) excels in her depictions of characters struggling desperately-and often futilely-to extricate themselves from terrifying snares set by loved ones. Readers will find her stories a cut above most other tales of interpersonal and supernatural horror. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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