Kirkus Reviews QR Code
COSTS OF LIVING by Steve Capone Jr.

COSTS OF LIVING

A Whisper House Press Anthology

edited by Steve Capone Jr.

Pub Date: Sept. 1st, 2025
ISBN: 9798989391936

A collection of contemporary horror fiction.

This debut offering from Whisper House, edited by its founder Capone, features a selection of horrific short stories united by home-and-neighborhood themes, with contributors ranging from seasoned, award-winning veterans of the publishing world to newcomers seeing their work in print for the first time. The stories cover the whole of the human landscape, from city life to country life to the most obviously terrifying location of all (the suburbs), and they vary in length from just a couple of pages to an average page count of around 10. The ethos of the anthology will be familiar to fans of Stephen King (there are virtually no stories here that aren’t explicitly cut from King’s cloth): the unexpected horror in the quotidian and familiar, whether it’s the neighborhood playground or that particular terror of modern life, the local homeowners association. In Sam Weller’s “Creepy Crawly,” the hapless narrator finds himself in an increasingly aggressive standoff with a millipedelike creature in his apartment (“We both lived in a hole-in-the-wall,” he observes. “And if you really look at it, in one way or another, don’t we all?”), and a Jewish mother and her son encounter particularly virulent xenophobia in an Adelaide suburb in Jordan King-Lacroix’s “Just Being Neighborly.” Capone edits this collection with evident skill, choosing solid work and arranging it effectively. Brisk, businesslike entries like “Decorations” by J.D. Simpson, featuring a town that takes Halloween very, very seriously (“Around eleven forty-five, the temperature plunged” on the big night. “Dead grass hardened into hoary spikes of frost; fog formed in the shivering woods”), contrast well with more diffuse outings like “The Annual Family Reunion” by Christina Griffith. As in all anthologies, there’s some uneven qualities, but fans of modern horror will find plenty to please them here.

A well done, page-turning anthology of stories about home being where the horror is.