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‘Interior Darkness,’ A Conversation with Peter Straub

February 16, 2016 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Peter Straub-photoPeter Straub needs no lengthy introduction. As a novelist and poet, he has received many literary honors including the Bram Stoker Award, the World Fantasy Award, and the International Horror Guild Award. In 1965, he earned a B.A with honors in English from the University of Wisconsin at Madison; and one year later, an MA from Columbia University. In 1969, he moved to Dublin, Ireland to work on a Ph.D and began writing professionally. Peter collaborated with Stephen King on two novels, The Talisman and Black House.

Interior Darkness, a collection of 16 short stories written over the course of years, demonstrates Peter Straub’s uncanny ability to blur literary genres and pen short stories ranging widely in length, style and tenor, providing a highly entertaining and unusual volume.

Read more on the Huffington Post >>

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Filed Under: About Books, creativity, Huffington Post Column, Interviews, On Writing Tagged With: horror, novels, personal trauma, short-stories, Stephen King

The Khmer Kill: A Dox Short Story

July 22, 2012 by Mark Rubinstein

This is the first short story by Barry Eisler I’ve read. Dox, who has appeared in other novels, is the protagonist. At the outset, you know something may be wrong with the assignment Dox is given: to assassinate a man involved in human trafficking in Cambodia.

Once again, Eisler captures the atmospheric reality of the locale. And he keeps the tension going as Dox suspects the assignment is not typical. Dox gets involved with a young, lovely Cambodian student, and has qualms about the relationship keep deepening since he will be leaving in a few days.

And when it comes to the kill, Dox turns out to be a man of deep moral conviction, despite the nature of his profession. Five stars out of five!

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Filed Under: About Books, Mark Rubinstein, Reviews Tagged With: assassinate, barry-eisler, Cambodia, human trafficking, short-fiction, short-stories

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