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Harlan County Horrors by Mari Adkins
Harlan County Horrors by Mari Adkins








Harlan County Horrors by Mari Adkins Harlan County Horrors by Mari Adkins

Pulling coal from the ground pays well, but takes its toll on everyone eventually, and many don’t survive the task. What the tales do capture is a feeling of loneliness, of desperation, and of a hardscrabble existence in a remote place where good paying jobs are few and far between. I also liked Alethea Kontis’ “The Witch of Black Mountain”, another woman scorned tale that turns out a bit differently for the protagonist than does “The Power of Moonlight.”ĭo the stories capture the feel of Harlan County? Having never been there it’s difficult for me to say. “Inheritance” by Stephanie Lenz was my favorite of the collection, and possibly the scariest story of the bunch. Ronald Kelly’s “The Thing At the Side of the Road” has a darkly humorous twist – at first. In “Spirit Fire”, Robbie Sparks weaves a tale that warns about making a deal that seems too good to be true. Maurice Broaddus’ “Trouble Among the Yearlings” is a subtle tale that captures well the claustrophobia of being trapped in a mine. It was a very good selection to kick off the anthology. The lead story, “The Power of Moonlight” by Debbie Kuhn is a bitter lesson about a woman scorned and the folly of rash acts. These twelve stories are a showcase for tales of Kentucky coal country by a fine crop of writers, many of them with close ties to the state.

Harlan County Horrors by Mari Adkins

However, there’s more to Harlan than the mines for one thing there’s the people themselves, and where there are people, scary stories are sure to follow. With Harlan County being in the heart of coal country, one might expect a number of the tales to touch on aspects of mining, and that assumption is correct. Harlan County Horrors, edited by Mari Adkins, is billed as an anthology of regionally-inspired tales.










Harlan County Horrors by Mari Adkins