Could a werewolf anthology send a person howling at the moon? Or would they rather tear this book apart with their teeth? Curse of the Full Moon may just get you in the mood for Halloween.
Posted by travizzt on September 21, 2010
Could a werewolf anthology send a person howling at the moon? Or would they rather tear this book apart with their teeth? Curse of the Full Moon may just get you in the mood for Halloween.
Posted in Anthology, Book Reviews, General Horror Novels | Tagged: Anthology, Barb Hendee, Bay Wolf, Beneath the Skin, Brown Bomber, Charles de Lint, Curse of the Full Moon, Darrell Schweitzer, Footsteps, Full Moon Heath, Gene Wolfe, George R. R. Martin, Harlan Ellison, Himmler, In the Lost Lands, James Lowder, Joe Louis, Joe R. Lansdale, Jonathan Carroll, Lila the Werewolf, lycanthropy, Matt Venne, Max Schmeling, Michael Moorcock, My Zoondel, Nancy A. Collins, Neil Gaiman, Peter S. Beagle, Population: 666, Ramsey Campbell, S. Carleton, Talbot, Tanith Lee, The Brown Bomber and the Nazi Werewolves of the S. S., The Change, The Gentleman's Hotel, The Hero as Werewolf, The Lame Priest, The Werewolf, The Werewolf of Camelot, The Wife's Story, Trading Hearts at the Half Kaffe Cafe, Ulysses Press, Ursula K. Guin, vampires, werebeasts, Werewolves, William Messner-Loebs, Wolf Train West | 2 Comments »