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For other authors named Alex Brown, see the disambiguation page.

4+ Works 262 Members 11 Reviews

Works by Alex Brown

Night of the Living Queers: 13 Tales of Terror & Delight (2023) — Editor — 132 copies, 4 reviews
Damned If You Do (2023) 68 copies, 5 reviews
The House Where Death Lives (2024) — Editor — 41 copies, 1 review
Rest in Peaches (2024) 21 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

The Gathering Dark: An Anthology of Folk Horror (2022) — Contributor — 347 copies, 4 reviews
Why on Earth: An Alien Invasion Anthology (2025) — Contributor — 18 copies

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Reviews

11 reviews
This one was entertaining, definitely. For a plot revolving around demon deals, aswangs, and magic, however, there were parts that strained credulity a bit too far for me. One has to suspend disbelief to become immersed in a story about a girl, caught in a horrible situation of parental abuse, summons a demon to take her father to hell and then promptly forgets that it happened. I had a harder time buying into the notion that said demon would in any way care about the fate and wellbeing of show more that girl, let alone that of the entire town and other towns that might fall under the same (apparently bad, in a way that he himself wasn't?) demonic influence.

Beyond that, though, I did like the story and the characters. The friend group was enjoyable to see, loyal to each other as they were, even if the writing had them jumping from one end of the emotional spectrum to the other at a rate that even most ordinary teenagers would find weird. I actually liked the "obnoxious" character of Dustin far more than I thought I was going to, even if it was telegraphed that he would be redeemed halfway through the story. I do wish that the ending and the cliffhanger-ish ending had been a little less of a thinly-veiled homage to Buffy, but as I like Buffy, that's fine.
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½
It’s been a while since I’ve read a collection of short stories, and this one is definitely worth a read. The introduction explains how this anthology is a way for Queer People of Color to reclaim the narrative of “other,” “savage,” or “monster.” A chance for these authors to celebrate the complexity of their long-denied humanity. It’s meant to showcase their stories and is intentionally set during Halloween, a time when QPOC are most visible. All the stories take place not show more only during Halloween but during a blue moon, a celestial even where an additional moon appears during the year. It was quite fascinating and ingenious that a collection of stories by and about QPOC are all set on a rare event as a blue moon on Halloween. These stories are about love, loss, acceptance, bravery, adventure, and romance that will comfort, challenge, haunt, and humor.

“Welcome to the Hotel Paranoia”

The first story out of the gate was a sweet romance between Annabel and Chrys. Annabel is awkward and out of place in comparison to her classmates, but she attends a party because Chrys, her best friend and the girl she exchanged a kiss with a couple of months ago, sent her a note to attend. But all is not as it seems, as the night wears on the illusions slowly fade. I was a bit disappointed as I wanted better for Annabel at the end. However, the ending does go into the whole idea of where queer people can be accepted and how.

“The Visitor”

Oooo, this one was particularly creepy and the cliffhanger ending just upped the ante on the creepy scale. Here we have a teenage girl, Toya, who is waiting impatiently for midnight of Halloween. Her and her dad have a ritual they do each Halloween since her mom’s death. But who is the visitor? And is it really her mom? Plus what was with the car that was following Toya and her girlfriend, Ari? Creepy? Definitely? Do I have questions? Duh! Yet, it does tackle the idea of loss and grief and what we do to move on.

“A Brief Intermission”

This was one of my favorites out of the thirteen stories! Our two main characters, Afsaneh and Rusty, work at the local town drive-in movie theatre. One night the owner/boss, Henry, is attacked by an animal, a creature. Henry begs them to break him out of the hospital, which Afsaneh and Rusty refuse, so instead they do the ritual he does for Halloween. They’re not to interact, talk, look at the creatures who arrive, yet Rusty can’t help themselves and who knows where the night will lead. This one was definitely spooky but also the ghosts are racist, homophobic, xenophobic people who make their opinions known. It was a crazy ending that again goes towards the idea of how transgender people and those who live outside the male/female binary are treated and where they’re allowed to live.

“Guested”

This story is definitely going to keep me up late at night! Nina is invited to a Guested party. Guested is a company that allows people to be whoever/whatever they want to be. Nina’s sister, Penny, went to a Guested party a few years ago but Nina is convinced the person who came back isn’t her sister. She’s determined to get to the bottom of this, even if she has to do it alone. So, so psychologically creepy, especially since I’ve watched Get Out as well. I was so impressed with the writing and the story and the themes of queer people having to hide themselves in the world is so potent in this story.

“Rocky Road with Caramel Drizzle”

Ugh! This one is difficult. It’s the one story that involves a hate crime. Julian was beaten nearly to death one year ago to the day and his friends and family think it’s time to “get over it.” Because there’s a specific time period to get over not only your near death but also a group of asshole boys beating you up for being gay. I’m especially annoyed with Julian’s best friend, Amber, who thinks it’s more impactful on her, than him. Well, at this party that Julian and Amber go to, Julian ends up summoning a demon and maybe this demon understands Julian more than the others in his life. A beautiful story about grief and revenge that definitely hurts while reading but is quite hopeful at the end.

“The Three Phases of Ghost-Hunting”

An adorable and humorous story about a ghost haunting a mall. Daisy is determined to contact Terrifying Bob with her best friend Iris in tow. The adorable part is that Terrifying Bob isn’t that terrifying, and by the end Daisy and Iris admit their feelings for one another, which was so cute!

“Nine Stops”

I actually bought Trang Thanh Tran’s book She is a Haunting, and after reading this short story, I’m even more excited to read it. The story is reminiscent of one of those internet videos that says if you stop watching it you’ll die. What happens next are events that I’m not even really sure of, but I was disgustingly freaked out. Beware if you get queasy easily as there is a scene that is quite grotesque.

“Leyla Mendoza and the Last House on the Lane”

Oh, another story that I absolutely loved. It’s about a haunted house in the village that Leyla lives in called The Vines. A house that looks quite abandoned until the night of the thirteenth moon, where someone catches sight of a light through the window. This Halloween night Leyla and his cousins go out on Halloween, and this night Leyla suggests going to The Vines. It’s there that Leyla sees someone that gives her hope for the future. A great story for transgender and nonbinary people around the world.

“In You to Burn”

An interesting story about fire and queer girls. Luce is a girl who accidental fires keep happening around her throughout her life, but the latest fire harmed another girl in school, Harley. But Harley is no longer herself, she’s changed according to their classmates. Yet, all of this comes to a head at a party on Halloween night. Are Luce and Harley really who they are? Or are their lives the workings of gods?

“Anna”

Another story where the two girls, Elise and Dani, are struggling with feelings for each other and don’t admit it till a dire event on Halloween night. Elise is babysitting two young girls in a supposed haunted house. The two young girls play with a Ouijia board that releases an evil spirit. Who knows who’ll survive the night? A good ole scary story is always something I’m up for and this one definitely delivers in that thread.

“Hey There, Demons”

What do you do when there is a poltergeist haunting your house? Obviously, you summon a demon to help you, or at least, that’s what Noah Kohli accidentally decided to do on Halloween night. But the demon Noah summons isn’t the typical demon from Hollywood. This is definitely an ADHD demon, who’s willing to help Noah get rid of the poltergeist but for a price. No, not a soul! The demon thinks souls will taste like lemons, which he hates. He wants to see what Noah’s family has before he gets ride of the demon. The whole night is a roller coaster of a ride and eventually, the demon does get rid of the poltergeist for Noah with a romance developing between the two. I didn’t know I could ship two characters in such a short story, but gosh do I ship Noah and this demon, Kody. They’re too cute for words and I love the chaos of Kody.

“Save Me From Myself”

A tragic story of a young girl, Mona, who doesn’t want to live anymore. She doesn’t think there’s much worth living, especially with having to hide who she is except on Halloween. Yet, Mona prays to Kali Maa and she answers…or someone answers. Later that night, Kali Maa gives Mona what she wants, in a way. As all deals with gods and demons never turn out as we want. The story is so sad since Mona doesn’t think anyone will miss her nor that she’s worth anything. Her friend, Gaurav, is only her friend because of their mothers. Nadine only kisses her in the maze to humiliate Mona. The ending is hopeful for a moment before it turns tragic once again.

“Knickknack”

A story of a mansion haunted by the clown Knickknack. An urban legend that Noah doesn’t believe in, but the night of Halloween, his brother, Carl, is kidnapped by Knickknack and he does everything he can to save him. Along the way, Noah and his best friend and crush, finally kiss. I was a bit disappointed by the scary story in this one. It wasn’t as strong as the other stories in the collection, but it doesn’t detract nor weaken the collection.

All-in-all this is a wonderful collection of creepy and queer and diverse stories that are worth a read and place on the bookshelf.
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Deceptive (enough red herrings to rebait a string of lobster traps), gory, and impossible to put down. This is what I'd tell anyone thinking about reading this. All the teens have faults, but most are forgivable because of their backstories. Tessa's growing discomfort with Emerson gives cisgender readers an understanding of how queasy it can get inside when trying to be who you aren't inside. Altogether a fun, fine read.
This was advertised as a queer Filipino Buffy the Vampire Slayer and it lived up to that description!

Cordy made a deal with a demon ten years ago to keep her abusive alcoholic father from killing her. It’s been eating away at her ever since then. Suddenly, on the eve of a big theater production that Cordy is stage managing, the demon shows up and says her bill is due. But instead of taking her soul, he wants her to help him get revenge on a rival demon. Cordy only has a few days to figure show more out how to do this, and on top of that, she’s trying to figure out how to confess her feelings to Veronica her childhood BFF, and how to deal with the rich asshole kid whose family basically runs the town.

This was a fun read, I loved seeing the relationship between Cordy and Fred as it grew and changed. It was really cool seeing how Alex wove Filipino culture and monsters into this story. It had a great plot and I was really hooked and wanted to see how the story was going to turn out.

My only real critique is that I think Cordy beat herself up WAY too much about sending her father to hell. He was an abusive asshole who LITERALLY was trying to kill her. I felt like her constant self hate over that was too much.

Favorite Parts - The Maleficent precious moments figurine! And I loved that a lot of action took place literally on the theater stage.

Read This If You - Were a theater kid in school, loved BTVS, like monsters from other cultures and want a fantastic queer monster fighting story
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Associated Authors

Shelly Page Editor, Contributor
Ayida Shonibar Contributor
Ryan Douglass Contributor
Rebecca Kim Wells Contributor
Kosoko Jackson Contributor
Kalynn Bayron Contributor
Tara Sim Contributor
Trang Thanh Tran Contributor
Maya Gittelman Contributor
Sara Farizan Contributor
Em X. Liu Contributor
Sandra Proudman Contributor
Kay Costales Contributor
Courtney Gould Contributor
G. Haron Davis Contributor
Gina Chen Contributor
Nora Elghazzawi Contributor
Tori Bovalino Contributor
Rosiee Thor Contributor
Linsey Miller Contributor
Traci Chee Contributor
C. L. McCollum Contributor
Nova Ren Suma Contributor
Liz Hull Contributor

Statistics

Works
4
Also by
2
Members
262
Popularity
#87,813
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
11
ISBNs
63
Languages
1

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