Review: Spontaneous Human Combustion

Spontaneous Human Combustion by Richard Thomas

Short story collection from Keylight Books, released February 22, 2022

I went into reading this collection knowing very little about Richard Thomas’s work.  What a fantastic surprise: this is a great collection of stories.  

Thomas’s work is dark, thoughtful, and immersive.  There’s a vein of horror running through each of the stories, even when they at first seem to be science fiction, weird fiction, fantasy, or myth.  At times, the stories in Spontaneous Human Combustion reminded me of the weirdness of Kristi Demeester or Jeff Vandermeer, or the bleak sci-fi of the TV series Black Mirror, but Thomas’s style is all his own.  

Thomas goes back to several themes throughout the collection: mistakes and forgiveness, choices, repentance, evolution.  His characters are broken, sometimes evil people with a depth that is heartbreaking and hopeful.  The writing is beautiful and every word is carefully chosen.  

A few of my favourite stories were:

Repent – Where the author made me empathize with a seemingly irredeemable character.

Saudade – A post-apocalyptic and mythic look at purgatory with a fantastic sense of place.

Nodus Tollens – A tense deal-with-the-devil story (one of my favourite tropes) that stands out because of how Thomas gives his characters life.

From within – A short, powerful sci-fi horror with a perfect opening sentence: “The first time they come to measure my son, he is only eleven years old.”  Beautifully-written and quietly emotional.

In his house – A complete surprise, very funny (or terrifying?), and I won’t spoil it for you.

Ring of fire – A novella that made me think of the best Black Mirror or Outer Limits episodes, ending the collection on a hopeful and philosophical note.

There were a few stories that didn’t work for me, or went over my head, but I found that even when I didn’t love a story, the imagery and prose was an absolute pleasure to read.  I highly recommend this collection.

Thank you to the author for providing me with a review copy.

4 responses to “Review: Spontaneous Human Combustion”

  1. The author sent me a copy of this before it was released, but I didn’t finish it because I found the stories really confusing. I’ll probably return to it later, though. I’m still a little embarrassed about that. 😛

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    1. Yes there were a couple that went way over my head too! The more straightforward stories were the ones that resonated more strongly with me. If you want to give a story a try I recommend Nodus Tollens, it’s a good old-fashioned deal with the devil tale, and kept me hooked.

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      1. I’ll try to read the whole thing soon. From what I read he seemed like a pretty good writer (and that cover art! Wow!)

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      2. Yes that cover is gorgeous! And it’s totally ok to read the first paragraph/page of a story, go “huh that one’s not for me” and move on to the next. This collection has a lot of variety so I’m sure you’ll find something that resonates for you.

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