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999: Twenty-Nine Original Tales of Horror and Suspense

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Award-winning writer and editor Al Sarrantonio gathers together twenty-nine original stories from masters of the macabre. From dark fantasy and pure suspense to classic horror tales of vampires and zombies, 999 showcases the extraordinary scope of fantastical fright fiction. The stories in this anthology are a relentless tour de force of fear, which will haunt you, terrify you, and keep the adrenaline rushing all through the night.

Amerikanski dead at the Moscow morgue / Kim Newman --
The ruins of contracoeur / Joyce Carol Oates --
The owl and the pussycat / Thomas M. Disch --
The road virus heads north / Stephen King --
Keepsakes and treasures: a love story / Neil Gaiman --
Growing things / T.E.D. Klein --
Good Friday / F. Paul Wilson --
Excerpts from the records of the New Zodiac and the diaries of Henry Watson Fairfax / Chet Williamson --
An exaltation of termagants / Eric Von Lustbader --
Itinerary / Tim Powers --
Catfish gal blues / Nancy A. Collins --
The entertainment / Ramsey Campell --
ICU / Edward Lee --
The shadow, the darkness / Thomas Ligotti --
Rio Grande Gothic / David Morrell --
Des Saucisses, Sans doute / Peter Schneider --
Angie / Ed Gorman --
The ropy thing / Al Sarrantonio --
The tree is my hat / Gene Wolfe --
Styx and bones / Edward Bryant --
Hemophage / Steven Spurill --
The book of irrational numbers / Michael Marshall Smith --
Mad dog summer / Joe R. Lansdale --
The Theater / Bentley Little --
Rehearsals / Thomas F. Monteleone --
Darkness / Dennis L. McKiernan --
Elsewhere / William Peter Blatty

666 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1999

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About the author

Al Sarrantonio

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Al Sarrantonio was an American horror and science fiction writer, editor and publisher who authored more than 50 books and 90 short stories. He also edited numerous anthologies.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 184 reviews
Profile Image for Trudi.
615 reviews1,673 followers
October 24, 2011
I am judging this collection of short stories with an especially critical eye for several reasons:

1) it promises to deliver some of the best original horror stories by authors at the pinnacle of their craft (including Stephen King, Neil Gaiman, Edward Lee and William Peter Blatty)

2) it received the 1999 Bram Stoker Award for Best Anthology

and 3) despite my commitment to finish this 700+ page anthology (and neglecting many other books while I persevered), it still took me too long to finish - almost 2 weeks! That tells me at no time was I ever so engrossed the pages turned themselves.

Finally, upon finishing, I'm hard pressed to remember salient details from any of the stories. The majority feel blurry. Not one punched me in the solar plexus and left me thinking about it for days. Even Stephen King's contribution, "The Road Virus Heads North" isn't one of my favorites by him (and one I had read before anyway when it was republished in King's anthology ).

I am particularly disappointed with the contributions from Neil Gaiman and William Peter Blatty. Gaiman's story is dark and crude, rough and profane, nothing about it even "felt" like Gaiman. Blatty offers up a very underwhelming haunted house story that borrows too heavily from other sources like Richard Matheson and Shirley Jackson. Blatty not only closes the anthology, his story is more the length of a novella. The extra pages don’t help in my opinion. It is an easily forgettable tale with a “surprise� ending that should come as no surprise because we’ve seen it too many times before.

Stories that did manage to stand out though include:

“The Owl and the Pussycat� by Thomas M. Disch:
this one has a nice creepy feel and once you finally understand what’s happening, the “a-ha� moment is very rewarding. I’ve never read anything quite like it, and for that alone it gets high marks. A diamond in the rough indeed.

“Catfish Gal Blues� by Nancy A. Collins
This one features a freeloading, womanizing pretty boy guitar player with a streak of greed that leads him down the path to a final comeuppance. There is a bluesy, southern feel to it all that I liked very much.

“The Entertainment� by Ramsey Campbell
I haven’t read a lot by Campbell but plan on rectifying that as soon as possible. I’m not sure exactly what the hell is happening in the freakish hotel the main character finds himself stranded in one rainy night (I’m not sure I want to know). It’s bad news, I know that, and I was thoroughly creeped out the whole time and just wanted him to get the hell out of there post-haste. Parts of this story actually reminded me somewhat of how I felt reading . There is no humor in Campbell’s story though; it is all very deadly serious.

䱫� by Edward Lee
I don’t know if I should be surprised or not that my favorite story of the entire collection is this little diddy by gore master Edward Lee. My only exposure to Lee has been his notorious novel (which I just couldn’t stomach and failed to finish). Here, he offers up his devilish version of a “just desserts� story. The ending isn’t completely original, I just love how Lee delivers it in his own demented style. For a guy who usually cannot hold back on the gruesome details, he is nicely subtle here allowing the reader to imagine the worst.

“AԲ� by Ed Gorman
I really liked this one too. It’s a simple story effectively rendered, a real snapshot of regular people and the choices made when driven by pure selfishness. There is no comeuppance here, no just desserts, which is likely much more a reflection of reality. I think we would be shocked to learn just what ordinary people would be capable of doing (and doing so without suffering any guilt). I think more sociopaths walk among us than we would like to think about or admit.

October Country 2011 #7



Profile Image for Dennis.
660 reviews314 followers
June 19, 2021
Rating only for „Der Unterhaltungskünstler� (OT: The Entertainment) by Ramsey Campbell.

1.5 stars, actually. It wasn’t much fun. I tried a few of the other stories but didn’t finish any of them and gave the book back to the friend whom I had borrowed it from.

The anthology as a whole won the Bram Stoker Award and was nominated for both the World Fantasy Award and the British Fantasy Award. So, maybe I picked the wrong stories? Did I read the one written by Stephen King? I don’t remember at this point.
Profile Image for Bernie Gourley.
Author1 book109 followers
February 4, 2015
999 is a collection of 28 short stories and one novella that are all in the genre of horror and dark suspense. The collection includes some superstar authors such as Stephen King, Joyce Carol Oates, Neil Gaiman, and David Morrell, but all of the authors are established writers and most will be familiar to readers in this genre.

I won’t go into each story in depth, but will list and briefly describe each. A few of the stories stuck with me, while others were quite forgettable—so I’ll point out which were which. Your results may vary.

1.) “Amerikanski Dead at the Moscow Morgue� by Kim Newman: This is a Cold War Zombie story. It was intriguing.
2.) “The Ruins of Contracoeur� by Joyce Carol Oates: The family of a disgraced Judge move to a remote area to stay out of the limelight, and faceless monster sightings ensue. How bad could a Joyce Carol Oates� story be? It’s solid and well-written. It wasn’t among my favorites.
3.) “The Owl and the Pussycat� by Thomas M. Disch: An “inanimate� stuffed owl and plush-toy cat converse about their wicked, spouse-abusing owner. Creepy, but not one of the strongest entries. The stories in this collection range from realism to far-fetched speculative fiction. This work is toward the latter end of the spectrum.
4.) “The Road Virus Heads North� by Stephen King: A mutating “killer� picture is obtained at a yard sale. This is among the stronger stories.
5.) “Keepsakes and Treasures: A Love Story� by Neil Gaiman: About a collector of the “exotic.� While Gaiman is my favorite author of this bunch, I can’t say this is story was among my favorites of the collection. I will say that it has some of the cleverest wording of any of the stories (as one would expect of Gaiman), but maybe that humor works at right-angles to the story. You decide.
6.) “Growing Things� by T.E.D. Klein: About a husband / Mr. Fixit and his following of advice columns on a growth. This is a short piece, but not among the more memorable stories. It’s innovative, but not the least bit intense.
7.) “Good Friday� by F. Paul Wilson: A vampire story set in a convent. A good story, but obviously not particularly innovative. However, if you like the idea of nuns battling vampires, here’s your story.
8.) “Excerpts from the Records of the New Zodiac and the Diaries of Henry Watson Fairfax� by Chet Williamson: A swanky dinner club that rotates hosts and each host tries to outdo the last in the presentation of “exotic delicacies.�
9.) “An Exaltation of Termagants� by Eric Van Lustbader: I’ll have to be honest; this was the least memorable of these stories. When I flipped back through to write this review, I found that I’d completely forgotten the piece. I think its lack of memorableness speaks for itself. It’s about an unappealing man and his sucky life that’s tied to his poor relationships with women. I think the problem is two-fold. First, it’s one of the longer stories in the collection. Second, unlike Joe R. Lansdale’s “Mad Dog Summer,� it’s a long short story without memorable characters or a taut story arc. In short, if you’re going to go long, you’ve got to give us characters we can either love or despise, and you’ve got to give us a pace that keeps us intrigued. This story does neither. I know it’s all subjective, but I think this collection without this story would be improved.
10.) “Itinerary� by Tim Powers: A mysterious caller asks the protagonist to tell an unknown woman caller that said caller “just left� in response to her inquiry. From there the story meanders into personal tragedy before bringing it all back together in the end. It was so-so. I liked the premise, but it didn’t have that x-factor in execution.
11.) “Catfish Gal Blues� by Nancy A. Collins: A river catfish mermaid story. This was a weird but highly memorable story.
12.) “The Entertainment� by Ramsey Campbell: Man thinks he’s checked into a hotel, but it’s really some sort of asylum. Not the most memorable, but not the least either.
13.) 䱫� by Edward Lee: Man awakes in an ICU, and is informed that he’s a gangster involved in pedophilia and other hardcore taboo pornography. Vivid and well-crafted.
14.) “The Grave� by P.D. Cacek: A young woman with a horrible mother discovers a grave in the woods that she’s never seen before. This one is eery and visceral.
15.) “The Shadow, The Darkness� by Thomas Ligotti: About a tour group promised “the ultimate physical-metaphysical excursion.� This paranormal story is just OK.
16.) “Knocking� by Rick Hautala: Remember Y2K? It was the idea that the entirety of the world of computing would come to a screeching halt because their little (inadequately-programmed) computer minds would be blown by a date starting in �20?� This story is based on that notion.
17.) “Rio Grande Gothic� by David Morrell: A cop keeps finding shoes left in the same section of road, and eventually begins to wonder if someone isn’t trying to tell him something. This story does a good job of capturing one’s curiosity and keeping one’s attention.
18.) “Des Saucisses, Sans Doute� by Peter Schneider: This is one of the shorter stories in the book, and it’s also an almost absurdist dark piece. You may laugh or you may vomit, either way the writer had an effect.
19.) “AԲ� by Ed Gorman: This story is white-trash gothic. It’s about a couple that are “stuck� with this kid, and are concerned that the child has learned their dirty, little secret and will turn them in. It was one of the stories that stuck with me most intensely. The unlikable character development is exceptional.
20.) “The Ropy Thing� by Al Sarrantonio: A couple of kids in a neighborhood assaulted by a thing that is� well, ropy (rope-like.) Not one of the better pieces, but it has the virtue of being short.
21.) “The Tree is My Hat� by Gene Wolfe: A man befriends an outcast on island in the South Pacific. It’s a solid piece.
22.) “Styx and Bones� by Edward Bryant: A cheating man comes down with a mysterious ailment. This is a well-executed story.
23.) “Hemophage� by Steven Spruill: Another vampire story, this one set inside a detective story.
24.) “The Book of Irrational Numbers� by Michael Marshall Smith: It’s about a guy from Roanoke, Virginia who is obsessed with numbers. As there aren’t many math short stories, if you are a big fan of math fiction you may find this interesting. The writing style is fun. If you aren’t a math fan, you may lose the story.
25.) “Mad Dog Summer� by Joe R. Lansdale: A man recounts a story of murder from his youth living in a rural community. This is one of the strongest stories in the collection. It’s also one of the longest, but the author does an outstanding job of keeping one’s attention throughout.
26.) “The Theatre� by Bentley Little: A clerk at a bookstore ventures into a forbidden floor above the store to find a creepy theater that will change his life. It’s a good, creepy story.
27.) “Rehersals� by Thomas F. Monteleone: I don’t know that I would have put this in the same genre as the other stories, but it’s an excellent story—and so I can see why the editor was eager to include it. It is speculative fiction, as opposed to being realist, but I wouldn’t count it as either horror or suspense. It’s about a man handling props in a community theater who is given glimpses into what his life could have been like if he’d stood up to his abusive father. It’s one of the best stories in the collection.
28.) “Darkness� by Dennis L. McKiernan: A man moves into a beautiful house willed to him by an eccentric uncle. The problem is that the lights in the house are so bright as to be an assault on the eyes—leaving not a shadow or dark space in the house. The lights are wired to be either all on or all off. It doesn’t occur to the nephew that the lights might be that way for a reason.
29.) “Elsewhere� by William Peter Blatty: This is the longest piece--a novella / very short novel and not a short story. It’s about a realtor who’s trying to sell a house that’s haunted. She brings together a writer and a couple “experts on the paranormal� to debunk the haunting so that the house will become salable. But everything is not as it appears.

This is a good collection of stories. Some are better than others, but the best are extraordinary. I’d highly recommend it for anyone who likes horror, dark suspense, or the macabre. Within that genre, it’s an eclectic mix of stories in form, substance, and style.
Profile Image for Dark-Draco.
2,332 reviews45 followers
March 28, 2013
This is a great collection of horror and suspense stories. A huge book, cotaining 17 short stories, 8 novelettes, 3 novellas and 1 short story. Stephen King, Ramsey Campbell, Eric Van Lustbader, Gene Wolfe and Neil Gaiman are just some of the authors.

There's some gore-fest, some psycological thrillers, some creature feature stories, but I'm sure everyone will find something they enjoy.

I found it hard to pick my favourite. 'Elsewhere' by William Peter Blatty (who wrote 'The Exorcist') is brilliantly written and entertaining, but I felt it was a bit predictable. So, for my favourite, it's going to be 'Amerikanski Dead at the Moscow Morgue' by Kim Newman.

Enjoy - and feel free to sleep with the lights on!
Profile Image for Димитър Цолов.
Author34 books387 followers
October 31, 2021
Българското издание на антологията, грабнала Брам Стокър през 1999, е разделено на два тома. Чел съм ги доста отдавна, тогава ми ги зае приятел, а преди няколко седмици в рамките на личната ми кампания #OctoberHorror си ги набавих антикварно и отново се потопих в мрачните им селения. По няколко думи за всеки от разказите.

Том 1

1. Американски мъртъвци в московската морга / Ким Нюман (5/5)
Сносен зомби апокалипсис, ситуиран в мизернато соц. реалност. Мярна се и духът на един легендарен руски мистик за разкош. Само краят ми дойде малко по-претупан.
2. Руините на Контракьор / Джойс Каръл Оутс (2/5)
Уникална атмосфера, а накрая� нищо. И нямаше да е проблем, ако творбата не беше доста обемна�
3. Бухалът и писаната / Томас М. Диш (3/5)
Шантава история, накарала ме да си задам въпроса каква дрога е употребил авторът, докато я е писал.
4. Пътният вирус се носи на север / Стивън Кинг (5/5)
Краля определено умее да въвлича в неприятности героите си писатели. И тука така.
5. Спомени и съкровища: любовна история / Нийл Геймън (5/5)
Един всесилен богаташ, който не пести средства, за да задоволява нестандартните си сексуални апетити и един верен наемник, водещ разказа от първо лице.
6. Да си отгледаш нещо / Т. И. Д. Клайн (1/5)
Авторът си отгледа една квалитетна единица.
7. Разпети петък" / Ф. Пол Уилсън (5/5)
Вампирска класика!
8. Откъси от записките на "Новият зодиак" и дневниците на Хенри Уотсън Феърфакс / Чет Уилямсън (3/5)
Гурме-гнусотийки.
9. Възхвала на харпиите / Ерик Ван Лустбадер (5/5)
Давещ се в мескал писател трябва да се помири с вътрешните си демони � читава мистична история.
10. Странстване / Тим Паурс (4/5)
Доста сходна като общо внушение с предходната мистична история.
11. Блус за сирени / Нанси А. Колинс (4/5)
Градският пройдоха � женкар и китарист - ще си го намери.
12. Забавлението" / Рамзи Кампбел (3/5)
Доколкото разбирам � такъв бил стилът на този автор � увъртян и неразбран. Факт, увъртя ме и нищо не разбрах, но пък пише сносно.
13. Интензивно отделение" / Лий Сиймър (5/5)
Пласьор на нелегалната порнография загазва сериозно � хареса ми финалната врътка. Лий Сиймър е псевдоним на сплетърпънк ветерана Едуард Лий.
14. Гробът / П. Д. Качек (4/5)
Читава психарийка
15. Сянка, мрак / Томас Лиготи (4/5)
Разказ със Лъвкрафтско звучене.
16. Лигавото същество / Ал Сарантонио (3/5)
Съставителят на антологията се представя със средняшка апокалиптична творба.

Том 2

17. Чукането / Рик Хаутала (4/5)
Читав сетинг Апокалипсис 2000 и майсторски загатната житейска драма отвъд психичния срив на главния герой.
18. Готика от Рио Гранде / Дейвид Морел (5/5)
Полицай разследва наглед невинна странност � чифтове обувки, появяващи се на шосето през определен интервал от време. Чете се на един дъх.
19. Истински кървавички / Питър Шнайдър (1/5)
Предговорът на Ал Сарантонио към, хм, творбата е доста по-добър от самата творба� учудвам се, че подобно недоразумение е намерило място сред страниците на точно тази антология...
20. Енджи от Ед Горман (3/5)
Стандартна криминален сетинг за зъл пандизчия и амбициозна кучка�
21. Дървото е моята шапка � Джийн Уолф (4/5)
Призрачна история с хубав замисъл, но с една идея по-претенциозно за вкуса ми изпълнение.
22. Стикс и кости � Едуард Браянт (5/5)
Любовен триъгълник и черна магия - какво да не му харесаш?
23. Кръвопиецът � Стивън Спруил (5/5)
Вторият вампирски разказ в антологията, който макар и част от по-мащабна Вселена е достатъчно грамотно написан.
24. Книга на ирационалните числа � Майкъл Маршал Смит (3/5)
Стил на писане - 5, фабула - 1 ... 5+1 = 6; 6:2 = 3
25. Лятото на бясното куче � Джо Р. Ландсдейл (5/5)
Новелата неслучайно е носител на Брам Стокър(1999) в индивидуалната категория. Сериен убиец на жени в расисткия американски Юг от годините на Голямата депресия. Кла-са!
26. Театърът � Бентли Литъл (4/5)
Кукли и� още нещо...
27. Репетиции / Томас Ф. Монтелеоне (5/5)
Отново театрален сетинг, но коренно различен лайтмотив � как изборите, които непрекъснато правим променят живота ни.
28. Мрак � Денис Л. Макиърнън (4/5)
В съдържанието на томчетата заглавието е по-различно � Тъмнината, но това не променя общия замисъл на творбата.
29. Някъде другаде � Уилям Питър Блати (5/5)
Краткият роман е майсторски обърната с хастара навън призрачна история. Долових леко намигане и преклонение към .

Сумарна оценка - около 3,9/5.


Profile Image for Brian Steele.
Author40 books90 followers
January 29, 2010
Although now a decade old, this anthology remains quite dear to me. Thanks to Sarrantonio, I was introduced to quite a number of new Horror Authors; those who don't get the same marketing blitz as King or Koontz. And thank Cthulhu for that! While some of the "Old Guard" stand up and take notice here (Campbell, Blatty, Oates, ect.), I also got to check out short works by Kim Newman and Neil Gaiman. While I was already a fan of both authors, I soon started following Edward Lee and F. Paul Wilson as well.

To me, just about every tale in this anthology is excellent. Not only excellent, but important. It's a great sampling of what some of the finest horror writers of today are producing.
Profile Image for Jeff.
802 reviews23 followers
November 27, 2014
First off, let me say that there are quite a few typo errors in the version that I read. However, they in no way detracted from my enjoyment of this most excellent collection of stories in the horror genre, collected by Al Sarrantonio. This is at least the third book that I have read that was edited by Mr. Sarrantonio, and I must say that I like his choices.

This is a rather hefty book, weighing in at almost 700 pages (666 for the ebook and more than that for the paperback), and includes a very large number of stories by authors that are both instantly recognizable, and some, not so much, or at least I had not heard of them before. The chilling finale of the book is a novelette by William Peter Blatty (famed author of The Exorcist), called "Elsewhere." I think it wise that Al chose to save it for last, because it might be the best story in the collection.

Among my other favorites were "The Ruins of Contracoeur," by Joyce Carol Oates, "The Road Virus Heads North," by Stephen King (one of my all time favorite King shorts), "Keepsakes and Treasures: A Love Story," by Neil Gaiman, "An Exaltation of Termagants," by Eric Van Lustbader, "Itinerary," by Tim Powers, "Catfish Gal Blues," by Nancy A. Collins, "The Grave," By P.D. Cacek, "The Shadow, the Darkness," by Thomas Ligotti, "Rio Grande Gothic," by David Morell, "The Ropy Thing," by Al Sarrantonio, "The Book of Irrational Numbers," by Michael Marshall Smith, and "Mad Dog Summer," by Joe R. Lansdale. This doesn't mean I didn't like the rest of the stories. These are just the ones that really stood out.

I would recommend this book for any fan of the genre. It is, as I said earlier, a most excellent representation of the variety of the horror genre, and introduced me to some excellent authors.

Incidentally, is it a coincidence that the ebook version of 999 had exactly 666 pages?
Profile Image for Kandice.
1,644 reviews356 followers
November 7, 2017
Those five stars are for my favorite five stories in this collection. I am going to review each of them separately below when I have a few minutes. I didn't love every story presented, but those I did more than made up for those I didn't. Awesome editing Sarrantonio.

"The Road Virus Heads North" by Stephen King � This is a very scary story and I have read it many times. A recurring theme in King’s writing is a character’s ability to see the future in some way, and yet be powerless to change or stop it. Such is the case here. What always gets me most with this story is the phrase “filed teeth�. I cringe just typing those words. Not only do I imagine they look terrifying, but I clench in anticipation of pain at the idea of actually DOING that to oneself. Again, ick!

"Keepsakes and Treasures: A Love Story" by Neil Gaiman � I read this on the plane and cannot tell you how uncomfortable I was almost from the first paragraph. I was actually sweating and had to reach up and turn on the little fan thing above my seat. I was squirming and felt a little grimy just for having witnessed what happened between the lines on the page. Gaiman is very careful to never come right out and say what’s happening, but anyone with half a brain just knows. Yuck! Kudos to him for not only making me feel so strongly, but for doing it in so few pages.

"Elsewhere" by William Peter Blatty This is just a mindf*#k! I mean a serious screwing. You read it and then you are carried back to the beginning. It’s an absolute ourobouros which is my very favorite kind of story. Blatty is a genius storyteller, as everyone knows, and this is not exception to his craft.
Profile Image for Kimberly.
1,882 reviews2 followers
April 1, 2013
I have this book on one of my "to keep" paperback shelves. There are quite a few stories in here that I liked a lot, and very few that I just didn't care for. In an anthology, that's quite a feat!
Profile Image for Ellie Midwood.
Author50 books1,088 followers
May 10, 2019
A very good short-story collection of horror. I particularly enjoyed "The Ruins of Contracoeur," "The Road Virus Heads North," "The Theatre," and "Elsewhere." I would definitely recommend it to all fans of the genre!
Profile Image for Annalisa.
124 reviews39 followers
September 1, 2017
Difficile che un florilegio di racconti non scada nella discontinuità per la mole di materiale e per la varietà degli autori, ebbene...

Non è questo il caso!

Questa raccolta contiene perle rare:

Primo fra tutti il suggestivo The Ruins of Contracoeur di Joyce Carol Oates, uno dei racconti goticheggianti della nostra, che in italia non sono mai stati tradotti.

Poi vogliamo parlare di Elsewhere di William Peter Blatty, che getta nuova luce sugli interrogativi lasciati da L'esorcista?

Praticamente nessuno dei racconti selezionati da Serrantonio si fa dimenticare, e spesso la rileggo questa raccolta!


Profile Image for Tye.
22 reviews1 follower
July 15, 2018
I read this many years back and know that I really enjoyed it at the time, but sadly cannot recall much from it. I do remember that I felt quite pleasantly unsettled by Joyce Carol Oates's entry
Profile Image for Caro.
18 reviews1 follower
March 13, 2017
Anthologies are always a mixed bag- you can't please everyone all of the time. But this one was a bit more "mixed-baggish" than I was expecting. To be fair, I'm not really a big fan of fantasy (okay, I loath it), and many of these stories are quite heavy on the fantasy/"aren't I writing just the quirkiest thing ever" element, so that may have biased my opinion.

The standouts for me: The Ruins of Contracoeur by Joyce Carol Oates, The Entertainment by Ramsey Campbell, The Shadow, The Darkness by Thomas Ligotti, Mad Dog Summer by Joe R. Lansdale, and Elsewhere by William Peter Blatty (the premise and storyline of which are completely unoriginal, and the whole thing reads like it's been sitting in his desk drawer since 1983 and he pulled it out and tinkered with the dates, however...his writing is so good, he can suck you in, make you forget you're reading, and scare the ever-loving daylights right out of you. I wish he had dedicated his career to writing horror novels and not Hollywood screenplays, but what can you do).

Something else I'd like to note is Al Sarrantonio's lukewarm to the point of passive-aggressive introduction to Thomas Ligotti. It puzzles me. Maybe even angers me, especially given the almost girly gushing other, and in my opinion, less accomplished, writers received. Ligotti's story is wonderful, of course- beautifully written, dense, off-kilter, flavoured like a German Expressionist painting- it's also extremely funny and he even pokes very obvious fun at himself.

Al Sarrantonio's own contribution is one of those fantasy-driven stories I mentioned above, seemingly quite taken with it's own cleverness. Perhaps that annoyed me even further.

So this was definitely worth the read- a small handful of excellent stories, some good and entertaining stories, some dreck, and some that just didn't work for me, personally.
Profile Image for Keri Ann.
15 reviews7 followers
August 24, 2013
I liked this book, I just didn't love it. Seeing Stephen King as a contributor is what drew me to the book in the first place. Turns out that the story he added (The Road Virus Heads North) was something I had already read in Everything's Eventual, however it is a great story for anyone who's never read it. There were a few stories in 999 that I might consider reading again, but the majority of the stories left me wanting for something. A lot of the time I found myself finishing the story and then having to go back a few pages to see if I had missed a plot line somewhere, some of them just left me confused. I was most disappointed by The Ruins of Contracoeur by Joyce Carol Oates...it had an amazing opening and a very disjointed ending, it just left me confused. The book wasn't all bad though, I really loved Good Friday, Catfish Gal Blues, Rio Grande Gothic, Hemophage, Mad Dog Summer, and Elsewhere. The way I see it, the good is really good but the bad is mostly just confusing. Overall it's not a bad read if you like short stories, just be prepared for a little more bore than gore.
Profile Image for Barry.
Author10 books102 followers
March 3, 2012
To be fair, I haven't read the entire book; but, those few stories that I HAVE read over the years were enough for me to say that this is a good, if slightly uneven, anthology. Joyce Carol Oates' "The Ruins of Contracoeur" is a beautiful, disturbing, and über-mysterious piece, and Dennis L. McKiernan's "Darkness" is the kind of story that will leave you giggling...nervously. Naturally, Stephen King's story was fun and eerie, and F. Paul Wilson's "Good Friday" was a superb example of gritty, nasty, and very, VERY unromantic vampires. Bentley Little's "The Theater," didn't make a whole lot of sense, and Al Sarrantonio's "The Ropy Thing" basically left me scratching my head afterwards. But all in all, this is a worthy investment for either author completists or newcomers alike.

...on second thought, let me emphasize: "The Ruins of Contracoeur," "Darkness," "Good Friday," and "The Road Virus Heads North" = solid gold.
Profile Image for Lyndsay Mccrossin.
12 reviews2 followers
September 15, 2014
What a delicious collection of tasty literary morsels; I gobbled them up greedily each evening, refusing to go to sleep at appropriate hours, just to find myself unable to sleep anyway when I finally did hit the pillow. These stories of horror will make your skin crawl, your eyes double check for ghosties in the corners of your bedroom, and your body hair stiffen as your flesh gooses in terror. This collection scared the hell out of me and I enjoyed every second of it. If you enjoy the horror genre, the totally underrated and wonderful horror genre, then this is a true treat for you.
Profile Image for Pia Cathrin.
17 reviews
May 4, 2014
Most of the tales in this book are very captivating. It's a big book, but since it consists of individual stories by various authors ... well, it makes it easy to read. A few of the stories were a bit huh? to me. I guess I didn't quite get the point of them or didn't find them scary. But overall this book is worth the read.
Profile Image for Gilda Felt.
688 reviews9 followers
June 7, 2019
Over 650 pages, a quarter of a million words, and enough adrenaline rushes to keep the average horror reader up for nights, 999 is dark decadence indeed.

I was expecting more from this book. “Never-before-published tales� by King and Wilson, I’m there, and they didn’t disappoint. But I can’t say the same for the rest of the book. Too many of the stories may have had things going on that were horrifying, but they weren’t horror stories. One pleasant exception (other than King and Wilson,) was Rehearsals, by Thomas Monteleone. But even it is more Twilight Zone-y than true horror.

I’ve stopped reading anthologies because they can be so uneven, but I bought this one a long time ago, and finally gave it a go. Turns out it’s about as uneven as you can get.


Profile Image for Nancy Hudson.
365 reviews26 followers
January 7, 2021
This was a pretty decent anthology of horror and suspense stories. Many of them were quite good while others were pretty poor. I’m pretty fussy about my horror/suspense. The best stories were By Thomas Disch, Stephen King, Nancy A. Collins,David Morell, Thomas Ligotti and Joe R. Lansdale. The novelette at the end by William Peter Blatty was pretty good also. It really creeped me out. This book would have been far better if some of the more depraved stories had been kept out of it. I don’t know why the editor/author felt a need to put those stories in an otherwise very good anthology. It dropped my rating at least one star if not two. I don’t mind gory horror but I do not like stories that involve child molestation or blatant misogyny and nowadays you can do better than that. This anthology is 20 years old. I would love to see a reprint taking out the bad stories and adding stories similar to the ones above. That would be a worthwhile horror anthology. Nevertheless the book kept me reading which is pretty unusual for a short story anthology.
Profile Image for Murphy C.
756 reviews4 followers
Read
September 10, 2022
I read about half of this anthology at least a decade ago. I remember thinking that the quality of the stories was terribly uneven, and eventually I just put it down.
Profile Image for Kurt Dahlke.
184 reviews
December 10, 2021
Not a dud in the bunch, lots of superlative stuff, and chunky at 666 pages including copyright notices! :)
Profile Image for Tina.
Author14 books21 followers
February 12, 2013
This was a tough one to get through.

I appreciate now, why horror-anthology readers were quick to give this book one or two star at best over at Amazon; it’s not what I’d call a “horror anthology� nor is there much in the way of suspense, but the marketing and the title itself suggests otherwise.

This book is more a ‘weird tales with interesting characters�.

I get it - the editor was obviously going for the same readers that made Hitchcock suspense anthologies so popular...but most of the stories here lack that suspensful punch.

A few of the stories do stand out: Newman’s zombie tale Amerikanski Dead at the Moscow Morgue, Carol-Oates The Ruins of Contracoeur, Gaiman’s Keepsakes and Treasures, and King’s ode to the Night Gallery tale about the painting that stalks…The Road Virus Heads North. The standouts for me: Disch’s The Owl and the Pussycat, Wilson’s Good Friday, and Williamson’s Records of the New Zodiac�

I gave up reading once I hit Lustbader’s story. I skipped to the next and found that lacking as well. >_< I think I’ll try and get the rest of these read but at this point, I can’t give it anything higher than a two-star.


Poorly marketed and converted (this book is loaded with common digital conversion errors that appear to be spelling errors to the untrained eye), and overreach on the editor’s part (I don’t need to read the editors thoughts at the beginning and end, and before every story.) This is a book that, if priced at $5 or less might earn it an extra star, but sadly the publisher sets the price—the same publisher that aimed for an audience familiar with the authors involved--but failed to deliver what that audience actually desires to read.
Profile Image for H. Anne Stoj.
Author1 book22 followers
September 25, 2011
Over all, a really fantastic collection of short stories. While the collection is over a decade old, I was pleased to find that I hadn't read anything in it before. (Or, if I had, I don't remember and thus it was new again.) My favorite, I think, was Joyce Carol Oates. I'm not recalling the title, but the language is still haunting me (forgive the pun), which always means a very strong story to me. Mad Dog Summer, now it's the author I'm forgetting, was also really memorable as it felt a bit like Harper Lee and Flannery O'Connor somehow; and while not a supernatural horror story, it was horror all the same. The story I liked least was William Peter Blatty's Elsewhere. I recently re-read the Exorcist and found it lacking. Elsewhere was, I suppose, predictable. Again, another annoying female character that just made me want to skip over any part where she appeared. It felt like a cheap version of Shirley Jackson's novel, Hell House, and The Others (yeah, that Nicole Kidman film). So, definitely worth reading for nearly every story. Just skip the last.
Profile Image for Becky Ippolito.
53 reviews10 followers
September 4, 2011
I'd have to say that the first half of the book was a bore to me. I don't rememember a single story from that part. The second half was much better with stories that kept me on my toes and anxious to pick up the book any chance I could. Notably stories I enjoyed were "The Grave" by P. D. Cacek, about a strange librarian who was a little too emmeshed with her mother and motherhood; "The Rio Grande Gothic" by David Morrell was an exciting story about a small town cop and the creept shoes he keeps finding in the middle of the road; Rehearsals" by Thomas F. Monteleone, which was less creepy but stange in it's own way and about rewriting your own personal life play; and the4 haunted house story "Elsewhere" by William Peter Blatty was a more unqiue haunted house story and not one you would easily find anywhere else. A good attempt at a compilation, just wish I wasn't so bored in the beginning.
Profile Image for Badly Drawn Girl.
151 reviews28 followers
October 13, 2010

Impressive collection! I'm quite fond of short stories and I'm a recovering horror addict. I cut my teeth on the stuff. The very first book I ever bought was The Shining... I was 8. I found it at a library closeout sale for a dime. That was the start of something wonderfully awful. But as I got older I lost my passion for the genre, or maybe I wasn't reading the right stuff, but either way, horror and I parted ways. But I had heard good things about this collection so I gave it a shot. There is enough diversity in these stories to please most anyone. And there is a lot of wild imaginations romping all over the pages. I had a lot of fun, and some frights, while reading it. I recommend it highly for fans of short fiction, and fans of the horror genre. There is something here for everyone to "sink their teeth into..." pun intended
Profile Image for Jeanette Greaves.
Author8 books13 followers
September 13, 2024
Whew! This is a big book. I bought it when it first came out, as a collection of horror and suspense stories that was issued to celebrate the millennium. Hence the 999, for 1999. Also, I guess, for the UK emergency number, although this is a very US centric collection.

There are a lot of stories in this book. It's a huge book. It's massive, and heavy, and that's probably why it took me so long to re-read it. It's also surprisingly archaic in places, and also male author heavy, as many surprisingly recent anthologies are. I know, 25 years old isn't 'surprisingly recent' unless you're in late middle age and remember buying it on publication, but still ...

Let's tackle these notes in some kind of order. First, the 'short novel', by William Peter Blatty. 'Elsewhere' is a ghost story that is screaming out for a film or TV adaptation. It reads more like a screenplay than a novel, and is dialogue heavy. It's a nice idea, but I found it a long read for a short novel.

Then there are the three novellas. 'The Ruins of Contracoeur' by Joyce Carol Oates is the first in the book and is one of only three stories by a female writer in the book, out of a total of twenty nine. It has, of course, all the grace and skill that you'd expect of the author, with a hint of something that is never quite revealed. David Morrell's 'Rio Grande Gothic' is a tense story that drew me in and did not disappoint. 'Mad Dog Summer' is a Bram Stoker Award winning tale from Joe R Lansdale. I loved this Harper Lee meets Stephen King story about a series of murders and the free range kids of busy but honourable parents. The landscape is truly another character in this story.

On to the eight novelettes. Kim Newman's "Amerikanski Dead at the Moscow Morgue" is exactly what you'd expect of a late 20th century Kim Newman story. It's got zombies, black humour and a morally dubious protagonist. I loved it. On to Stephen King's 'The Road Virus Heads North', which was also featured in King's own anthology 'Everything's Eventual'. For me, this is a classic King story, with that sense of mounting dread and inescapable doom that he does so well. It still frightens me, a quarter of a century later. "Good Friday" by F. Paul Wilson is a lovely vampire apocalypse story that could well serve as an origin story for a vampire hunter. "An Exaltation of Termagants" by Eric Van Lustbader is a nice story with a predictable ending. Ramsey Campbell's 'The Entertainment' is classic Campbell, drawing us into the dank and shadowy grotesque world of the story with no mercy at all. "The Shadow, The Darkness" by Thomas Ligotti is a stylish and dark story that left me with an impression of a place and time but, three weeks after reading it, I can't remember the plot at all. I do remember enjoying it though. Gene Wolfe's 'The Tree is my Hat" is a lovely disconnected ghost story and one of the highlights of the collection. Finally, for the novelettes, "Rehearsals" by Thomas F. Monteleone is a rather sweet redemption story, which doesn't quite belong in this collection, but does provide some relief from the darkness.

So, on to the short stories. I'd forgotten how much I love Thomas M Disch stories, but 'The Owl and the Pussycat' reminded me. This story alone would make the anthology worth buying, it's just perfect. "Keepsakes and Treasures: A Love Story" by Neil Gaiman is about a boy's love for his mother, kind of. "Growing Things" by T.E.D. Klein is a fascinating story that keeps everything in the subtext, I enjoyed it. It may grow on you. "Excerpts from the Records of the New Zodiac and the Diaries of Henry Watson Fairfax" by Chet Williamson is one of only two stories that I remembered reading the first time round, a quarter of a century ago. If anything, it's become a little too plausible to be classed as horror. I absolutely loved 'Itinerary' by Tim Powers, it's exactly my kind of weird, and gets the 'I wish I'd written this story' award of the anthology. The second story in this book written by a woman is "Catfish Gal Blues" by Nancy A. Collins, and doesn't it just make you wish there were many, many more. It's funny, cutting and has a great payoff. I loved it. "ICU" by Edward Lee is a revenge gore short story, brutish and straightforward. "The Grave" by P.D. Cacek is the last story from a woman, and is a creepy little story about someone who should really, really, never have been a mother. Rick Hautala's 'Knocking' is a claustrophobic horror about coping or not coping with the fall of civilisation. "Des Saucisses, Sans Doute" by Peter Schneider fills the gap until the next story, "Angie" by Ed Gorman. "Angie" is another nasty little tale that shows that we don't need anything supernatural to invoke horror, the banality of self serving evil is more than enough. Being the work of the editor and anthologist gives "The Ropy Thing" by Al Sarrantonio a secure spot in the book. This story is pure Twilight Zone, being the tale of something eldritch taking over the planet. Creepy. Ed Bryant's 'Styx and Bones' is a fun tale of witchcraft and revenge that I liked a lot. "Hemophage" by Steven Spruill is a really nice vampire story that deserves a longer treatment, I'd read the hell out of the novel. "The Book of Irrational Numbers" by Michael Marshall Smith is kinda the B side of Stephen King's recent novella '‘Danny Coughlin’s Bad Dream� which was written twenty five years later. What can I say, it's MMS, and I loved it. Bentley Little's 'The Theater' is an odd little story about a hidden theatre with some very odd inhabitants; it's well written and really drew me into the story. "Darkness" by Dennis L. McKiernan is the last short story in the book, and is expertly written, I enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Kristen Pfaff.
62 reviews4 followers
January 10, 2010
This book is a must-read for people looking to gain an introduction to the horror field or looking to expand their range of authors to read. Some of the highlights included:

Amerikanski Dead at the Moscow Morgue - Kim Newman
The Owl and the Pussycat - Thomas M. Disch
The Road Virus Heads North - Stephen King
Keepsakes and Treasures: A Love Story - Neil Gaiman
An Exaltation of Termagants - Eric Van Lustbader
Catfish Gal Blues - Nancy A. Collins
Rio Grande Gothic - David Morell
The Tree is My Hat - Gene Wolfe
Elsewhere - William Peter Blatty

and my personal favorite:

Mad Dog Summer - Joe R. Lansdale
Profile Image for Linda Appelbaum.
519 reviews6 followers
August 3, 2014
This book offers 29 original stories sure to disturb your sleep if you read just before bedtime. The stories will scare, disturb, horrify, and give you the willies. If you enjoy scary, suspenseful, chilling horror stories you will certainly get caught up in this book. Keep the lights on brightly when reading because the shadows hold unknown creepy things that might getcha!
6 reviews3 followers
June 7, 2008
Only 2 gems, the story by Neil Gaimen is worth the whole book
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