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Counting Bodies Like Sheep: Extreme Horror Anthology (Evil Cookie Anthologies) Kindle Edition
18 authors tread through the muck and mud to add their own stories to the every-growing meat-pile of carnage and chaotic aftermath when bad decisions come full-circle. COUNTING BODIES LIKE SHEEP is the fourth extreme horror anthology from The Evil Cookie Publishing. Pushing the limits with fast-paced, high-gore elements and plots, this anthology holds no punches and blurs the line between sanity and insanity.
FEATURING ALL NEW STORIES BY:
- Edward Lee & Roman Neznayu
- Stephen Kozeniewski
- Gerard Houarner
- Armand Rosamilia
- Christine Morton
- Robert Essig
- Lucas Milliron
- Dustin LaValley & Daniel J. Volpe
- Jeremy Megargee
- Sarah Budd
- Bridgett Nelson
- Richard Dansky
- Josh Davis
- Mike James Davis
- Trevor Newton
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateApril 30, 2022
- File size1.1 MB
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Product details
- ASIN : B09XLMG3Z3
- Publisher : The Evil Cookie Publishing
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : April 30, 2022
- Edition : 1st
- Language : English
- File size : 1.1 MB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 148 pages
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Part of series : Evil Cookie Anthologies
- Best Sellers Rank: #801,292 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #580 in Horror Anthologies (Kindle Store)
- #1,434 in Horror Anthologies (Books)
- #1,856 in Horror Short Stories
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Gerard Houarner is a native New Yorker, born to Breton immigrants, a product of the New York City school system, the City College of New York, and Columbia University.
In grade school, he enjoyed writing and illustrating 1-2 page "novelizations" of sf and monster movies he watched on black and white TV. He picked up 50's and 60's sf books at the library and used book stores, graduated to digest sf magazines, and on the day of the first moon landing started reading Lord of the Rings. He started sending out stories as a teenager in the early 70's. In high school, he took his first writing course (Frank McCourt also taught writing at this school, but alas, his class was filled, though second hand advice from friends in his class were valuable).
His first published story appeared in Space and Time magazine in 1974.
At CCNY, he attended writing classes taught by Joseph Heller (Catch-22), Joel Oppenheimer (Black Mountain poet and Village Voice staple), and Irwin Stark (a teacher to many writers, including Norman Spinrad). Heller thought he could write, but didn't know how anyone would make money from the things he wrote. Joel was amused by his attempts at poetry. Stark took an interest in a short, experimental sf story, but also questioned publishing possibilities. He also crashed, along with many others, a writing class for graduate students taught by William Burroughs.
Tempted by the writing life, and a few sales to the small press, he took a year to work before going to graduage school to explore career choices. He applied to and was accepted to the Columbia University graduate writing program, the NYU fim school, and, because he discovered a talent for listening to people, the Rehabilitation Counselor program at Teachers College at Columbia. During this time, through friends he was able to visit editors' offices, book stores, film sets, and of course bars to get a feel for various careers and how he might earn a living working in those fields.
He chose counseling. It promised a stable living, and listening along with an ability to write were advantages in the profession. And though making a living as a writer seemed remote, he would be free to continue writing evenings and weekends.
The school provided full-time employment and course credits. He worked and rose through office administrative ranks at the Title IX Sex Desegregation Assistance Center (DIrector Effie Bynum), while attending classes, researched and wrote papers, and worked on a novel. He spent very little time at home. Though he did not deliver training, he does say "you're welcome" when people praise the many medals,victories and awards earned by women in the Olympics and other women's sports events
For his internship, he interviewed at the Postgraduate Center, a coveted placement in the city. When asked about the box he had carried into the interview, he replied that he was delivering a fantasy novel manuscript to an editor later in the day. The Director immediately questioned his ability to help people if he was also prepoccupied with imaginary beings and events. He replied that writing fiction for public readership demanded an acute awareness of real people and events to make an imaginary story believable.
He secured the internship, and was hired as a counselor upon graduation. The novel eventually sold to Lester Del Rey at Ballantine, and after editing, was published in 1986.
Later, he also attended workshops led by Shawna McCarthy, Nancy Kress and Terry Bisson.
Through the 80's and into the 90's, his fiction moved from fantasy and science fiction to horror, and eventually dark humor. Initiating the change of perspective on his writing was the time spent working at the Postgraduate clinic, located near Hell's Kitchen across the street from a Blarney Stone bar, next to an SRO for individuals released from the Riker's Island jail complex.
Experience at a methadone clinic on Delancey Street deepened his interest in darker stories.
The lower east side neighborhood was rich in events and experiences -- a building collapse,with the roar and dust cloud to be recalled years later when the Twin Towers fell; truckers speedballing in their cabs while parked under the clinic supervisor's second floor office; being chased by drug dealers on Essex street; police locking down McDonalds for drug searches; visiting and talking to local store owners the clinic supervisor had robbed before his recovery; assignment as the first counselor in the clinic to work with identified AIDS patients...
...the clients' stories -- some unable to step down to lower doses; others substituting alcohol, placidyl, etc. for their need; a cadre of Chinese men whose mothers gave them opium in China to keep them home, which didn't stop them from immigrating but crippled their ability to function once they arrived; once promising young people struggling to function...
...discussions with vets about their experiences, fears, trauma and actions, that evolved into a personal question and a dramatic story question - can those who have committed terrible acts ever find redemption?
As a mental health professional, he found these and many other questions, the why, when, how of pain, trauma, death, the dance between predator and prey, in everyday work, which sometimes found their way into the kinds of stories that asked to be written.
Over the decades, he has drawn inspiration from life, shadows, the absurd, and from the experiences working in the mental health field throughout NYC from the 80's through 2019, including a West Side counseling center, a lower east-side methadone clinic at the dawn of the AIDS era, a Bronx clinc in the crack era, a children's psychiatric facility, Bronx and Manhattan state psychiatric facilities, a forensic psychiatric hospital (the real-life Arkham).
He retired after serving as Rehab Director at Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center, and at Manhattan Psychiatric Center.
As a writer, he's had over 300 short stories, as well as novels and collections, published in the past 40 years. Genres include horror, fantasy, science fiction, and humor. He has also edited or co-edited anthologies and serves as Fiction Editor for Space and Time magazine (also available through Amazon.com).
He continues to write, at night, mostly about the dark.
For more, check out www.gerardhouarner.net, or http://www.facebook.com/gerard.houarner
Trap is an artist and extreme horror author of many novels and over 150 short stories throughout the past decade. His works have won the 2010 Royal Palm Literary Award, racked up 5 Splatterpunk Award nominations and been optioned for film/screenplay.
He is the owner of The Evil Cookie Publishing and spends most of his time hand drawing cover art and creating gory books to add to the The Evil Cookie catalog. As a product of the ‘80s, he likes his movies bloody and his music heavy.
Trap can be found lurking around Tampa, FL.
"There's a new generation of horror writers bursting onto the scene, and Jones is one of the leaders of the pack." -- EDWARD LEE, author of City Infernal, Header, and The Bighead
________________________________
Website: http://www.theevilcookie.com
Facebook: K Trap Jones
Twitter: @ktrapjones
Stephen Kozeniewski (pronounced "causin' ooze key") is a Splatterpunk Award-winning author and two-time World Horror Grossout Contest champion. His published work has also been nominated for the Voice Arts and Indie Horror Book Awards, among other honors. He lives in Pennsylvania with his fiancée and their two cats above a fanciful balloon studio.
When I was still a child and picked up my very first Goosebumps book by R. L. Stine, I knew I'd fallen head over heels in love with all things horror. It's a love affair that has only grown stronger over the years, a borderline obsession with stories that explore the darkest recesses of the human imagination. I guess you could say I'm like Thorny Rose in that way...always stalking down those special stories that have the ability to invoke a creepy-crawly feeling right down in the marrow of my bones.
As I grew older I discovered the work of some of my biggest inspirations like Stephen King, Edgar Allan Poe, H.P. Lovecraft, Clive Barker...and the work of those authors sent me deeper down the path of the macabre. During my teenage years I had the little tradition of reading Stephen King's The Stand each summer to lose myself in the devastation of the superflu and marvel at the sadistic magnetism of Randall Flagg.
I've devoured horror fiction for as long as I can remember and reading the words weaved by the greats of the genre inspired me to begin writing. I wanted the opportunity to tell my own tales with the intent to terrify, to disturb; to capture the morbid curiosity of the reader just as my own was caught so early on in life.
If I've managed to inspire some of those feelings in you, my readers, then I feel that I've accomplished something just a little bit magical. There's still some magic left in this world, and I think it's most powerful when manifested in the form of words scrawled across many blank pages. Granted any magic contained within my work will be of the dark variety...but I wouldn't want it any other way. ;)
I live in Martinsburg, West Virginia with my little old pug Cerberus. When I'm not writing, I enjoy hiking mountain trails, weight training, getting tattooed and being a garden variety introvert in his late 20s. Oh, and reading too (duh).
Connect with me online:
Facebook: www.facebook.com/JMHorrorFiction
Instagram: @xbadmoonrising
Josh Davis is known for his off-the-wall premises and unforgettably macabre atmospheres. Starting out as a reviewer for films, music, and TV, Davis tried his hand at storytelling with his tale, 'Confession of Mortal of Sins", which appeared in Rejected for Content 4. While appearing in numerous other anthologies with some of the industry's hottest writers, such as Edward Lee, Daniel Volpe, and Eric LaRocca, he published his first novel, Implosion of Chaos. Since then, Davis has cranked out multiple collections and novels. His latest collection of short stories, The Bleak Pages, was released July of 2024. Most recently, Trial Run and Senior Citizens' Bingo Hall Death Cage Extravaganza, both from Evil Cookie Publishing, proved Davis could delve into various sub-genres gracefully, weaving together brilliant thrillers about life's harshest lessons, told coldly with a bit of dark comedy thrown in for flavor. The future holds bright for Davis as he finishes his newest novella, Primals, scheduled to be released sometime in the summer of 2025.
He lives in Otisville, Michigan, bartending and people-watching until more stories ignite inside of his ever-evolving, obscured brain.
Oh, and while you're turning the pages, he's already in the closet.
Once an operating room registered nurse, Bridgett Nelson so enjoyed playing with human organs, she decided to turn her macabre interest into a horror writing career. She loves bubble baths (because nothing says spooooky writer like orange-scented bubbles), hates not knowing what’s swimming in the water with her, lives for Halloween season (but loathes chainsaw-wielding dudes in haunted houses), adores her West Virginia University Mountaineers, is very pro-Oxford comma, and thinks bananas are absolutely disgusting.
Her first collection, A Bouquet of Viscera, is a two-time Splatterpunk Award winner, recognized both for the collection itself and its standout story, "Jinx." Deadgirl, the novelization of the cult classic film, is now available from Encyclopocalypse Publications and includes forewords from the films actors, Noah Segan and Shiloh Fernandez, a Q&A from screenwriter, Trent Haaga, and a fan fiction piece from noted horror author, Jeff Strand. Her latest collection, Embracing the Profane, includes fifteen extreme stories that play on Bridgett's dark humor and twisted brain. She is also the author of Poisoned Pink, What the Fuck Was That?, Sweet, Sour, & Spicy, and Red Inside, a finalist in the 2025 Books of Horror Indie Brawl.
Her work has appeared in multiple anthologies, including the iconic Deathrealm Spirits, Crystal Lake's Hotel Macabre, Edward Lee's Erotic Horror for Horny Housewives, The Rack, GhabaGhoul, To Hell and Back, Evil Little Fucks, Y'all Ain't Right, Splatterpunk's Basement of Horror, Dark Disasters, October Screams, American Cannibal, A Woman Unbecoming, and the legendary Splatterpunk Zine.
Bridgett is working on her first original novel, a sequel novel to her most popular short story, and a collaborative novel with a very funny writer.
When Edward Lee read her story "Giggly," available in the Poisoned Pink collection, he said to her:
"Giggly kicked my ass. Outstanding job! I need therapy now."
Bridgett is mom to Parker and Autumn, three pugs, a Saint Bernard, and a ball python. She is a 2022 Michael Knost WINGS award nominee, won second-place in the '22 Gross-Out contest at KillerCon in Austin, Texas, and third-place in the ’23 Gross-Out contest.
She's a freelance editor. Audiobook proofer. Bookworm. Dog lover. Tarantula whisperer. Bra avoider. ENJF. Amaretto Sour obsessor.
Bridgett currently lives in Duluth, Minnesota, with Bram Stoker Award-winning author, Jeff Strand, and their ball python, Indie Hellspawn McFangy Serenity Strand.
The Evil Cookie Publishing is a indie horror publisher specializing in creating horror novels/novellas, collections and anthologies with unique hand drawn covers.
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 7, 2022Quite a gruesome, disturbing, and entertaining read! Thanks to this title, I have both, followed all the authors, and added their titles to my wish lists. A thank you to author Mort Stone for recommending this title :0)
- Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2022It came close to a 5 star but fell short because a couple stories are in no way Extreme, enough to wonder how they made the cut well at least some of them.
The stories that were extreme were all great and well with reading the book. I just wish the ones that weren’t extreme were in the front or not in the book because once you were on a roll one would come along and slow things down.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2022There's a lot of stories in here and they're all nice and pulpy, dripping with gruesome detail and squelching prose.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2023My extreme horror collection is growing ..This one is awesome to have ..