Intended AudienceTrade
Reviews"Stephen Graham Jones is a great devourer of stories, chewing up horror novels and detective stories and weird fiction, ingesting literature of every type and pedigree, high and low and everything in between. His stories betray his encyclopedic knowledge of genre and of storytelling, but what makes After the People Lights Have Gone Off unique is how Jones never rests among his influences, going beyond what other writers might dare to craft terrors and triumphs all his own." --Matt Bell, In the House upon the Dirt between the Lake and the Woods "If I've read better horror writers than Jones, I've forgotten them. He's at the apex of his game. After the People Lights Have Gone Off is the kind of collection that lodges in your brain like a malignant grain of an evil dream. And it's just going to be there, forever." --Laird Barron, author of The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All "Stephen Graham Jones is a true master of the horror short story. Inventive, quirky, unexpected and masterful." --Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling author of Fall of Night and Bad Blood, "Stephen Graham Jones is a great devourer of stories, chewing up horror novels and detective stories and weird fiction, ingesting literature of every type and pedigree, high and low and everything in between. His stories betray his encyclopedic knowledge of genre and of storytelling, but what makes After the People Lights Have Gone Off unique is how Jones never rests among his influences, going beyond what other writers might dare to craft terrors and triumphs all his own." —Matt Bell, In the House upon the Dirt between the Lake and the Woods "If I've read better horror writers than Jones, I've forgotten them. He's at the apex of his game. After the People Lights Have Gone Off is the kind of collection that lodges in your brain like a malignant grain of an evil dream. And it's just going to be there, forever." —Laird Barron, author of The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All Stephen Graham Jones is a true master of the horror short story. Inventive, quirky, unexpected and masterful." —Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling author of Fall of Night and Bad Blood, "If I've read better horror writers than Jones, I've forgotten them. He's at the apex of his game. After the People Lights Have Gone Off is the kind of collection that lodges in your brain like a malignant grain of an evil dream. And it's just going to be there, forever." --Laird Barron, author of The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All "Stephen Graham Jones is a true master of the horror short story. Inventive, quirky, unexpected and masterful." --Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling author of Fall of Night and Bad Blood, "If I've read better horror writers than Jones, I've forgotten them. He's at the apex of his game. After the People Lights Have Gone Off is the kind of collection that lodges in your brain like a malignant grain of an evil dream. And it's just going to be there, forever." —Laird Barron, author of The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All Stephen Graham Jones is a true master of the horror short story. Inventive, quirky, unexpected and masterful." —Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling author of Fall of Night and Bad Blood
SynopsisWINNER, Best Collection of the Year, THIS IS HORROR NOMINATED, Best Collection of the Year, BRAM STOKER AWARDS NOMINATED, Best Collection of the Year, SHIRLEY JACKSON AWARDS The fifteen stories in After the People Lights Have Gone Off by Stephen Graham Jones explore the horrors and fears of the supernatural and the everyday. Included are two original stories, several rarities and out of print narratives, as well as a few "best of the year" inclusions. In "Thirteen," horrors lurk behind the flickering images on the big screen. "Welcome to the Reptile House" reveals the secrets that hide in our flesh. In "The Black Sleeve of Destiny," a single sweatshirt leads to unexpectedly dark adventures. And the title story, "After the People Lights Have Gone Off," is anything but your typical haunted house story. With an introduction by Edgar Award winner Joe R. Lansdale, and featuring fifteen full-page illustrations by Luke Spooner, After the People Lights Have Gone Off gets under your skin and stays there. Table of Contents: Introduction by Joe R. Lansdale Illustrations by Luke Spooner Thirteen Brushdogs Welcome to the Reptile House This is Love The Spindly Man The Black Sleeve of Destiny The Spider Box (original Snow Monsters Doc's Story The Dead Are Not Xebico Second Chances After the People Lights Have Gone Off Uncle Solve for X, A collection of literary horror stories that are unique, mesmerizing, and based on our everyday worries and fears., WINNER, Best Collection of the Year, THIS IS HORROR NOMINATED, Best Collection of the Year, BRAM STOKER AWARDS NOMINATED, Best Collection of the Year, SHIRLEY JACKSON AWARDS The fifteen stories in After the People Lights Have Gone Off by Stephen Graham Jones explore the horrors and fears of the supernatural and the everyday. Included are two original stories, several rarities and out of print narratives, as well as a few best of the year inclusions. In Thirteen, horrors lurk behind the flickering images on the big screen. Welcome to the Reptile House reveals the secrets that hide in our flesh. In The Black Sleeve of Destiny, a single sweatshirt leads to unexpectedly dark adventures. And the title story, After the People Lights Have Gone Off, is anything but your typical haunted house story. With an introduction by Edgar Award winner Joe R. Lansdale, and featuring fifteen full-page illustrations by Luke Spooner, After the People Lights Have Gone Off gets under your skin and stays there. Table of Contents: Introduction by Joe R. Lansdale Illustrations by Luke Spooner Thirteen Brushdogs Welcome to the Reptile House This is Love The Spindly Man The Black Sleeve of Destiny The Spider Box (original Snow Monsters Doc's Story The Dead Are Not Xebico Second Chances After the People Lights Have Gone Off Uncle Solve for X