Gary McMahon (b. 1969) has quickly established himself as a leader of the “new wave” of writers of the macabre and supernatural working in Britain, and it is Britain, urban, rural, and historical, that forms the background for the stories in this collection. McMahon’s urban Britain is, as Steve Duffy notes in his Introduction, a world of white-collar drudgery . . . the bright and sterile modern office . . . the starter home on the new estate, with the bad area just around the corner . . . the double-glazing and security lights, Neighbourhood Watch and CCTV. The worst of modern-day horrors is revealed to the reader in stories such as “Slap” and “A Rustle of Paper”. McMahon’s horrors are no less, however, when the location is moved to the countryside, as is shown by the suffering of the protagonists in “Road Flowers”, “The Sand King”, and “Brokenback Isle”.