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Libidinous Zombie: An Erotic Horror Collection Kindle Edition
This collection is a work of fiction. Consider yourself trigger warned.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateOctober 27, 2015
- File size5.0 MB
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Product details
- ASIN : B0178YXSGI
- Publisher : Stupid Fish Productions (October 27, 2015)
- Publication date : October 27, 2015
- Language : English
- File size : 5.0 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 173 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #988,121 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #2,565 in Erotic Horror (Kindle Store)
- #2,827 in Erotic Thrillers (Kindle Store)
- #3,011 in Erotic Horror (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Janine Ashbless is a writer of fantasy erotica and steamy romantic adventure. She likes to write about magic and myth and mystery, dangerous power dynamics, borderline terror, and the not-quite-human.
Buyer beware! If you like dark romance and a hard-won Happily Ever After, try "Cover Him with Darkness," "Heart of Flame," or "The King's Viper." If you prefer challenging erotica, go for "Red Grow the Roses" or "Named and Shamed" instead. All her other books lie somewhere on the spectrum between.
* * * * *
Janine has been seeing her books in print ever since 2000. She's also had numerous short stories published by Black Lace, Nexus, Cleis Press, Ravenous Romance, Harlequin Spice, Storm Moon, Xcite, Mischief Books, and Ellora's Cave among others. She is co-editor of the nerd erotica anthology 'Geek Love'.
Born in Wales, Janine now lives in the North of England with her husband and two rescued greyhounds. She has worked as a cleaner, library assistant, computer programmer, local government tree officer, and - for five years of muddy feet and shouting - as a full-time costumed Viking. Janine loves goatee beards, ancient ruins, minotaurs, trees, mummies, having her cake and eating it, and holidaying in countries with really bad public sewerage.
Her work has been described as:
"Hardcore and literate" (Madeline Moore) and "Vivid and tempestuous and dangerous, and bursting with sacrifice, death and love." (Portia Da Costa)
Remittance Girl is the pen name of a Canadian writer who inherited and then squandered the talents of both her mother, the composer, and her father, the writer. She produced her first piece of erotic fiction at the venerable age of 36.
Born in Toronto, Remittance Girl spent her childhood at bullfights and in Catholic churches in Madrid, Spain. Her adolescence passed locked away in a selection of chilly boarding schools in the south of England. In her early twenties, she was a vocalist in a number of alternative bands. These experiences proved to be an excellent recipe for the formation of a rather perverse imagination.
The persona of Remittance Girl was born on the web in 1998 when she moved to Southeast Asia and began writing in earnest. As a perpetual expatriate, her stories often take the point of view of an outsider looking in. They examine eroticism in the face of personal and moral dilemma, and cultural disorientation. The express purpose of the work is to both arouse and disturb, often at the same time.
Remittance Girl's influences are broad in scope: from the poetry of Federico Garcia Lorca, the novels of Jane Austen and Kobo Abe, the music of Erik Satie and Metallica, to the films of Ridley Scott and the murky deviance of Japanese hardcore animation.
Her short stories have been published in M. Christian & S. Vivant's 'Garden of the Perverse', Lisabet Sarai's 'Cream', Violet Blue's 'Girls on Top', D.L. King's 'The Sweetest Kiss' and M. Jakubowski's upcoming 'Mammoth Book of Best New Erotica, Vol. 9', among others. Three of her books, 'Gaijin', 'The Waiting Room' and 'The Splinter', are available through Burning Book Press. An anthology of her short stories is available: 'Remittance Girl' from Coming Together Press.
Remittance Girl now lives in a house with a giant mango tree in the garden and a cat named 'seven'. She writes, teaches, and grows orchids.
Sample some of her short stories by visiting her site at www.remittancegirl.com
Allen Dusk is a splatterpunk at heart who enjoys toiling long hours in isolation while he's dreaming up stories. Whether they're horror, science fiction, erotica, or a wicked blend of genres, he enjoys keeping readers guessing where his words will take them next. He enjoys experimenting with photography, and lusting over old horror movies.
"A short story is a different thing all together - a short story is like a kiss in the dark from a stranger." ― Stephen King
Rose Caraway is a native Northern California writer, editor, audiobook narrator, and podcaster for the #1 Erotica show in iTunes, The Kiss Me Quick’s Erotica Podcast. She freely celebrates all things erotica with her wonderful husband and Lurid Listeners, and is fondly known as “The Sexy Librarian”.
You might also find Rose Caraway over at, “The Sexy Librarian’s Blog-cast” where she not only discusses her own journey in writing and her latest book and audiobook projects. She also interviews some of her favorite erotica authors, fellow narrators, and anyone else interested in engaging conversation, while along the way, offering helpful tips of the trade to aspiring writers. “The Sexy Librarian’s Blog-Cast” is a new way to get to know Rose Caraway and her husband/producer, Dayv Caraway, and their amazing friends!
Rose’s writings have prominently showcased her sex-positive approach to life, as well as shown her commitment to both feminism and masculinism. She believes that people of all genders and orientations should be considered complementary and interdependent and are necessary for a truly healthy and functional society.
thekissmequicks.com
Tamsin Flowers has been writing erotica for three years. She started out with short stories and has featured in more than 20 anthologies to date from Cleis Press, Go Deeper Press, House of Erotica, Xcite Books and Velvet Books. Her works have featured in collections curated by some of today's most celebrated editors - including Violet Blue (Best Women's Erotica 2014 and 2015), Rachel Kramer Bussel (The Big Book of Submission: 69 Kinky Tales), Alison Tyler (Twisted: Bondage with an Edge, Bound for Trouble: BDSM for Women, Just for Her, Just for Him) and Kristina Wright (Best Erotic Romance 2014 and 2015, Passionate Kisses: Erotic Romance Fantasies for Couples).
She has also self-published a sizzling collection of zombie erotica, Zombie Erotoclypse, and has had novels and novellas released by Xcite Books (The Christmas Tattoo, Her Boss and His Client), Secret Cravings (The Crimson Bond, The Scarlet Bond) and Totally Bound (Doing It for the Coach). She is currently releasing a monthly series called Alchemy xii.
Find out more at www.tamsinflowers.com or at www.alchemyxii.com
Jade A. Waters is a fiction writer, poetess, and voiceover artist in California. Her short erotic fiction and poetry has been featured in publications by Cleis Press, Coming Together, Fuse Literary, Cosmopolitan UK, and Stupid Fish Productions, including Best Women's Erotica of the Year (Vol. 1), Best Erotic Romance of the Year, and Best Women's Erotica 2014. Her stories have also been narrated on The Kiss Me Quick’s Erotica Podcast, and Lessons in Control, her erotic romance trilogy, was published by Carina Press. Jade's newest release—A Love Affair, From A to Z—is a narrative in verse available in ebook and audiobook, and narrated by Jade herself.
While Jade was first published as an erotica writer, her stories have expanded to capture all facets of love, relationships, sex, and passion—be the experiences of her characters joyous and sweet, or transformative, bittersweet, and achy. Her stories are often on the lyrical side, thanks to Jade's first writing love of poetry.
Want to know more? Check out http://jadeawaters.com.
Malin James is an essayist, blogger, and short story writer. Her work has appeared in Cosmo UK, Electric Literature, Bust, MUTHA, Queen Mob’s Tea House and Medium, as well as in podcasts and anthologies for Cleis Press, Sweetmeats Press and Stupid Fish Productions.
Her first collection, Roadhouse Blues, is now available from Go Deeper Press.
Find out more at http://malinjames.com
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers enjoy the book's readability and suspenseful stories. They find the stories entertaining, scary, and sexy, with vivid descriptions. Some readers describe the stories as the best they've read in a long time.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers enjoy reading the book. They find it entertaining and colorful.
"...imaginative, consistently well-crafted, diversely colorful, scary, entertaining, sexy—oh so sexy!— and just plain fun...." Read more
"Such a fast and compelling read. I didn't want to put it down...even when I knew I would have to get up and go to work the next day...." Read more
"...Neat trick and a very fun read. After that one, though, the dread takes over and things get dark fast (which is what you want)...." Read more
"Thank to all the authors. This was a great read I had a wonderful time reading it." Read more
Customers enjoy the suspenseful stories. They find the stories thrilling and entertaining, with a compelling story about a succubus. Some readers say the stories are the best they've read in a long time.
"...’s Apprentice’ closes out the collection with an equally-scintillating story about a succubus; this one held captive by a well-heeled occultist...." Read more
"...Rose Caraway contributes "Devil Winds," a grim yet satisfying revenge story that features a butcher shop, the Santa Ana winds, and the..." Read more
"What can i say? Rose is sexy,Her stories are sexy!" Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2015What a treat! And what a great trick, too; bringing together eight of some of the best—and best known— authors in the business for an anthology of erotic horror that is just simply freakin’ brilliant; highly imaginative, consistently well-crafted, diversely colorful, scary, entertaining, sexy—oh so sexy!— and just plain fun. I suspect that ‘Libidinous Zombie’ will become part of many readers’ annual Halloween tradition alongside Jack-o-lanterns, candy apples, recitations of Edgar Allen Poe, and a tour through the local haunted house.
Horror and erotica are sisters under the skin. At root, both forms are transgressive, setting out to elicit strong visceral responses by stepping outside the boundaries of acceptable, ‘polite’ behavior. As W.J. Renehan suggests in ‘The Art of Darkness’, “. . . horror fiction effectively lifts the constraints of social, sexual, and moral codes for our entertainment." Few paranormal entities so effectively lift those constraints than the zombie, which has captured the collective imagination in the early years of the new century like little else. The mythos plays on our most fundamental apprehensions, fears and phobias; vast armies of dead things that don’t know they’re dead, corpses that won’t stay buried; a contagion from which no one among the quick is immune, no matter how watchful or cautious, normal or righteous, well-prepared or healthily paranoid. The undead evoke our reflexive disgust, forcing us to confront some of our most deep-rooted taboos; cannibalism, ghoulism, necrophilia, pure animal appetite without consciousness or conscience; social decay and anarchy.
But what if a spark of self-awareness remained? A hunger for more than meat? A desire to consume human flesh in a very different way? Heightened senses, telepathy, even acute emotional awareness—albeit often confused by instinct? For that matter, what would happen if a zombie girl—perhaps a little more than halfway through the change— walked into a butcher’s shop and applied for a job? (Rose Caraway’s claustrophobic, moody ‘Devil Winds’ in which the hot late-August Santa Anna winds of southern California become a virtual character in the drama.) What if the last two survivors of a zombie apocalypse and a subsequent tsunami found themselves drifting out to sea on an improvised boat, only to discover that one of them might have been bitten before casting off? (Tamsin Flowers’ harrowing, darkly sensual ‘The Only Girl in the World’)
Of course, more things other than zombies populate these pages. There are succubae and serial killers, werewolves, demons and vampiric wraiths, all brought to vivid, terrifying, luridly undead life by this hyper-creative cadre of writers. Jade A. Waters’ ‘The Lucky One’ figuratively borrows a page from Todd Browning’s ‘Freaks’, with its portrayal of a paranormal sideshow complete with werecarnies, a thigh-dampeningly charismatic ringmaster, and audience volunteers for a live sex exhibition like no other. Something wicked and very sexy this way comes when a handsome doctor finds himself locked up with the inmates of an early-20th-century mental asylum in Mallin James’ shatteringly twisty, highly satisfying ‘Alice in the Attic’. Allen Dusk’s neo-gothic ‘Damaged Melody’ conjures a storm of dark images while leaving a fair amount of mystery beyond the margins—enough to keep readers guessing long after the final paragraph. Raziel Moore’s ‘Spell Failure’ plumbs the occult with an intense, vividly-imagined, extended scene of demonic ravishment and a frightening cautionary tale of misinterpreted desire and good intentions gone horribly awry. Remittance Girl’s ‘The Night That Frank Scored’ is a delicious, macabre-ly tongue-in-cheek reimagining of the demonic-sex mythos, with a somewhat cynical, mind-reading succubus who picks up an apparent loser in a bar, only to change his life in the most unexpected and amusing of ways. Janine Ashbless’ ‘The Sorcerer’s Apprentice’ closes out the collection with an equally-scintillating story about a succubus; this one held captive by a well-heeled occultist. Needless to say, all kinds of horrifyingly orgasmic wackiness ensues when the master foolishly leaves his horny young assistant in charge for a week.
Enthusiastically recommended!
- Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2015Such a fast and compelling read. I didn't want to put it down...even when I knew I would have to get up and go to work the next day. Each story did so much more than just fuel my dreams and inspire my own creativity. I am a new fan of each of these authors, and not just for their creativity...but for the fact that they don't allow others to stifle their dreams. Thank you R C for bringing these authors together in this collection.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2015I'm a regular consumer of "Best of" erotica collections, most notably by Cleis Press and edited by Rachel Kramer Bussel. It's a sure-fire way to check out the best in the genre without sifting through (and buying) a lot of junk. This group of stories by Stupid Fish Productions is different--instead of focusing on a kink or an annual survey, the unifying theme is sex and horror. Pretty smart. There's not a misfire in this collection by eight erotica heavy-hitters, and a few of the stories are the best I've read in a long time.
Highlights: "The Night Frank Scored" by Remittance Girl knocked my socks off. Not only did it deliver on the horror and sex (all the stories do), it was laugh-out-loud funny. Neat trick and a very fun read. After that one, though, the dread takes over and things get dark fast (which is what you want). I'm talking very, very bad endings.
"Spell Failure" by Raziel Moore was most unsettling. The set-up is delicious: A novice witch sneaks a book of spells from the coven library into the boiler room, takes off her clothes, and, oh-my-god, be careful what you wish for! There's a reason witches-in-training shouldn't mess around with spells. What follows is a toe-curling, painfully erotic, and unrelenting sex scene that scared the hell out of me (and, even more disturbingly, got me excited!).
In "Alice in the Attic," author Malin James goes all late-Victorian insane asylum on us. The take away is that to have a correct diagnosis of multiple personality disorder, the patient must be human. Nuff said.
Rose Caraway contributes "Devil Winds," a grim yet satisfying revenge story that features a butcher shop, the Santa Ana winds, and the recently dead (and sex). "The Lucky One" by Jade A. Waters is a carnival fantasy--creepy enough--that goes crazy at a special midnight show. The ending is very, very bad (which is very, very good).
The feel of the stories overall is no-holds-barred, push-outside-your-comfort-zone writing, which is what you need with such a highly charged genre. Kudos to Stupid Fish for pulling it together. Highly recommended.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2016Thank to all the authors. This was a great read I had a wonderful time reading it.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2016What can i say? Rose is sexy,Her stories are sexy!
- Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2015I have to admit, I wasn’t anxious to read this book even though I enjoy the writing of several of the authors. I hate zombies. And it’s not the gore, it’s the unrelenting, suffocating pursuit. Zombies are one of my irrational fears.
I faced my fear and read the book anyway. And I’m glad I did. Only one of the stories is about zombies. Tamsin Flowers’ zombie tale did give me the panicky feeling any story about zombies gives me because she tapped into that suffocating pursuit rather than the gore. But her tale turned out to be one of my favorites in the book.
The entire collection is full of horror and sex, and it’s a lot of fun. I’m a whimp about horror and there are a few stories I started at night and had to put down until daylight – most notably Malin James’s journey into an asylum. I also particularly liked Janine Ashbless’s erotic take on The Sorcerer’s Apprentice and the way Rose Caraway gave me second thoughts about how much I enjoy the Santa Ana winds.
These stories will keep you warm on a cold winter night and will make you pause to think about whether you want to turn the light off or not.
Top reviews from other countries
- Emmanuelle de MaupassantReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 5, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars A journey in which nothing is quite as it seems
This innovative anthology features authors varying greatly in style and in their approach, exploring the nature of our erotic drive, relentless and destructive: the 'libidinous zombie' within.
From the dystopian setting of a post-apocolyptic world (Tamsin Flowers' poignant and well-drawn tale) to the confines of an early 20th century mental asylum (Malin James' compelling depiction of descent into the 'madness' of sexual obsession) we are taken on a shadow journey, where nothing is quite as it seems.
The charm of these stories lies in the unexpected, the twists in the tale.
They arouse and horrify, provoking both disgust and a compulsion to continue.
They are more than they appear, offering not just entertainment but a deeper commentary on the desires we hide and those we choose to reveal.
They offer insight into our darker side, into the thoughts we rarely admit to.
And, they offer warning: be careful of what you wish for, and how you behave.
A true feast in which each dish has its own flavour: rich and spicy; gruesome and violent; heart-breaking and bittersweet.
I devoured these diverse tales course by course, without rushing, wishing to savour them to the full.