Cat People by Peter Grandbois & Dream Memories of the Fifty Foot Woman by Irena Dubrovna

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“Peter Grandbois is quickly building an impressive reputation for what I think of as “humanized horror” . . . It’s insightful storytelling at its most insidious . . . the author is only growing more confident and capable, wielding sci-fi tropes like blades to cut to the heart of our doubts and fears.”
San Francisco Book Review

“Grandbois makes a case for a newer, better understanding of monsters. He brings them from the far, unexplored edges of the map and sets them directly in front of you in order to show that the monster’s most frightening quality is his own fear. . . Grandbois shows us that the truth is indeed out there, but it’s even farther, darker, and more complicated than we might have first imagined.”
Los Angeles Review of Books

“Eerie stories harkening back to the grand old tales of The Twilight Zone will thrill as they entertain…the writing is so good that it goes beyond genre.”
Foreword Reviews

“Extraordinary characters in ordinary situations prompt wry philosophical speculations about everyday life and longings in this pair of novellas laced with tropes from sci-fi B-movies.”
Publisher’s Weekly

“If you ever doubted that monsters (and movie stars) have rich inner lives, doubt no more. Let Peter Grandbois be your guide to the wounded heart (or some extra-terrestrial equivalent) of every alien being on a rampage. Full of wit, verve, and imagination. And Things. And Blobs.”
Karen Joy Fowler, Pen/Faulkner and World Fantasy Award winning author

“The monsters Peter Grandbois gives us here aren’t just painfully wonderfully human, they’re each of us, they’re all of us. After reading this, you’ll see that you’ve had scales all along.”
Stephen Graham Jones, author of The Only Good Indian

“In this double feature, Grandbois peels back the scrim of the B-movie to reveal the wounded figures lurking behind, figures that cast shadows that seem from one angle monstrous but from another all too human. At once playful and painful--you’ll never look at B horror in the same way again.
Brian Evenson, author of Windeye and Immobility