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- "Putting the Pieces in Place"
- "There is Nothing That I Wouldn't
Do"
- "In Hiding"
- "Eleanor"
- "Dispossessed"
- "Afterword" by Elizabeth Brown
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- The five stories that make up R.B. Russell’s debut
collection, Putting the Pieces in
Place, demonstrate a subtle mastery of the macabre.
Enigmatic and enticing, they combine a pleasing respect for the great
tradition of supernatural fiction with a chilling contemporary
European resonance.
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- In the title story, an obsessive collector goes to
great lengths to recreate a moment in time. An author who many years
ago sent one of his characters out into the world, finds that she
returns to him in "Eleanor". In "There is Nothing That I Wouldn’t Do",
a young woman finds that a boyfriend’s feelings for her are more
heartfelt than hers for him, while a young woman in distress attracts
the attentions of a sinister landlord in
"Dispossessed".
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- With original and compelling narratives, Putting the Pieces in Place offers the
reader insights into the more hidden, often puzzling, impulses of
human nature, with all its uncertainty and intrigue. There are few
conventional shocks or horrors on display, but you are likely to come
away with the feeling that there has been a subtle and unsettling
shift in your understanding of the way things are. This book is a
disquieting journey through twilight regions of love, loss, memory and
ghosts.
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- Please note: This
edition has sold out, but the stories will be repinted in Ghosts, Fenruary
2012.
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- "...an excellent and very
satisfying debut collection..." - Ellen Datlow, The Best Horror of the Year Volume
Two.
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- "The hallmark of these
stories is their subtlety. Putting the Pieces in Place is a wonderful debut from an author who is among
those leading the way in blending horror and the strange tale."
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The Speculative Fiction
Junkie
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- "Ray Russell's stories in
Putting the Pieces in Place are captivating for their depth of mystery and
haunting melancholy. These qualities place Russell in a tradition of
authors that includes Sheridan LeFanu and Ramsey Campell, storytellers
whose works proceed with a creeping uneasiness that leaves a lasting
impression on the reader."
- - Thomas Ligotti
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- ". . . classy, tasteful stories
of quiet horror told in an unassuming, polished narrative style.
Mostly starting out as mainstream tales, Russell’s stories gradually
convey a subtle feeling of disquiet as, page after page, the
supernatural or the horrific unobtrusively creeps in. . . . In short,
an enticing, remarkable collection proving that it was high time
Russell would start a career as a writer. I’m looking forward to his
next book."
- - Mario Guslandi, Hellnotes
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- "R.B. Russell has produced a
work of timeless elegance which wouldn’t be out of place among the
classic European ghost stories collections. The stories are all richly
enigmatic with a subtle horror subtext. The European setting give the
stories a distinctive feel, everything here is slightly, subtly
different.
- Highlander's Book Reviews
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- "As with Henry James, one might
ask whether Russell is telling stories of the supernatural or of the
psychological. It comes down to perception and this superb collection
illustrates how each of us has a different way of putting the pieces
in place."
- - Brian J. Showers, Rue Morgue
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- In “Putting the Pieces in
Place” R.B. Russell plays with human emotions without drawing a
perceptible line between reality and fiction, passion and obsession,
and creates an atmosphere of unease without pointing exactly the
reason for it.- Dark Wolf's Fantasy
Reviews
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- Russell's horror is profoundly
internal - the horrors of alienation, of loss, of obsession, even of
love. Fans of Walter de la Mare take note. Hartley makes a good point
of reference … for like him and his successor Robert Aickman (and by
that logic his predecessor Henry James also deserves a mention),
Russell is concerned primarily with giving you a glimpse of daily life
gradually warped into another perverse shape without you knowing it. …
an outstanding collection.
- Andy McQuade in Gorezone, June 2009
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- ...the author's gift for a
finely-turned sentence and a well-crafted tale.
- David Longhorn in Supernatural Tales 15.
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