Picture of author.

About the Author

Includes the name: Caro Soles

Disambiguation Notice:

Kyle Stone is a pseudonym of writer Caro Soles.

Image credit: Caro Soles via http://www.carosoles.com/

Series

Works by Kyle Stone

nEvermore! Tales of Murder, Mystery and the Macabre (2015) — Editor — 70 copies, 32 reviews
The Initiation of PB 500 (1993) 60 copies, 2 reviews
Meltdown! (Richard Kasak Books) (1994) — Contributor; Editor — 52 copies, 1 review
Drag Queen in the Court of Death (2007) 36 copies, 3 reviews
The Citadel (1994) 35 copies, 2 reviews
The Danger Dance (2007) 15 copies, 2 reviews
Rituals (1994) 14 copies, 1 review
The Tangled Boy (2002) 14 copies
Bizarre Dreams (1994) — Contributor; Editor — 11 copies
The Hidden Slave (1997) 9 copies
Fantasy Board (1994) 9 copies
Fire & Ice (1996) 8 copies
Hot Bauds (1995) 7 copies

Associated Works

Granta 79: Celebrity (2002) — Contributor — 144 copies, 2 reviews
Horrors! 365 Scary Stories (Anthology) (1998) — Contributor — 138 copies, 1 review
Flesh and the Word 3: An Anthology of Erotic Writing (1995) — Contributor; Contributor — 109 copies
The Future is Queer: A Science Fiction Anthology (2006) — Contributor — 100 copies, 2 reviews
A Century of Gay Erotica (1998) — Contributor — 62 copies
Even Our Fantasies: A Compendium of Gay Erotica (1998) — Contributor — 41 copies
Happily Ever After: Erotic Fairy Tales For Men (1996) — Contributor — 35 copies
Blood Sacraments (2010) — Contributor — 18 copies
Noirotica: An Anthology of Erotic Crime Stories (1996) — Contributor — 15 copies, 1 review
Bizarre Sex and Other Crimes of Passion (1994) — Contributor; Contributor — 6 copies
Seductive Spectres (1996) — Contributor — 5 copies

Tagged

(Badboy) (7) * (9) anthology (12) Badboy (5) bdsm (16) Early Reviewers (9) ebook (11) erotica (35) fantasy (6) fiction (30) gay (34) gay erotica (8) gay fiction (10) gay men (7) Gay men > Fiction (5) glbt (8) horror (12) LCSH in comments (5) LGBT (5) m/m (9) mystery (11) own (7) print (5) pulp (6) read (10) science fiction (32) sf (6) short stories (15) to-read (19) US (9)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Soles, Caro
Other names
Stone, Kyle
Gender
female
Organizations
SF Canada
Awards and honors
Lamda Literary nominee (2008)
Nationality
Canada
Disambiguation notice
Kyle Stone is a pseudonym of writer Caro Soles.
Associated Place (for map)
Canada

Members

Reviews

46 reviews
I was expecting this book to be full of Poe pastiche but was pleasantly surprised to find that it was mostly stories inspired by and influenced by Poe's works. With the exception of Robert Lopestri's "Street of the Dead House", which tells "Murders in the Rue Morgue" from the POV of the orangutan, the works I liked the least were the ones that stuck closest to Poe's original stories, namely Nancy Holder's "Annabel Lee", which retells Poe's poems from the title character's POV, and Tanith show more Lee's "The Return of Bernice", which has Bernice coming back as a vampire. Despite the few clunkers, I really enjoyed this collection.

Favorite stories: "Street of the Dead House" by Robert Lopestri, "The Masques of Amanda Llado" by Thomas S. Roche, "The Deave Lane" by Michael Jecks, "The Drowning City" by Loren Rhoads", and "The Inheritance" by Jane Petersen Burfield.
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½
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Nancy Kilpatrick and Caro Soles bring us: nEvermore!: Tales Of Murder, Mystery & The Macabre - Neo-Gothic Fiction Inspired By The Imagination Of Edgar Allan Poe. This collection was like discovering Poe for the first time all over again. And I'm shocked to find myself stating such a thing.

Poe is one of my most beloved authors, first discovered as a very young man, and that was some time ago. I expect most of us who love Poe share the experience of discovering this at a very young age. After show more all, if one has ever taken an English class, then one has been introduced to Poe. And also like me, I expect most people have found it very hard to recreate that joy of first discovery. Not that I haven't discovered many great authors and their works since, because I certainly have (some have stories in this volume), but Poe's works have a very unique and special feeling to them that I've never found anywhere else. Perhaps some of this comes from the fact that I was so young when I discovered him, at least this is what I always thought up until now.

There have been any number of Poe theme'd anthologies over the years, and a near infinity of authors whose publishers trumpeted them as the next Poe. So I am always extremely wary when something new comes along invoking the name of this great writer. Needless to say, I approached this anthology with great caution. However, the line-up of contributing authors is such a list of luminaries that I had to give it a try.

Nancy Kilpatrick and Caro Soles have been loose on the reins with the authors. Each story starts with an introduction to the story by the author where they explain their own experience of Poe and why they've chosen a particular aspect of that experience to create their story. I think this way of doing things has created a magic formula of sorts. Every reader has their own very personal experience of Poe, and by letting these authors tap into their own personal experience, the result is a collection that feels deeply intimate. I believe it is this shared experience that invokes the anthology reader's own personal history with Poe. It felt like I was reading a newly discovered cache of lost Poe stories, like a continuation of what I first felt so many years ago.

I will make no attempt to breakdown the stories or to rate and rank them. Dissection would be a disservice, perhaps a sacrilege. There is only one way to read this anthology: jump in, submerge, return to that misty and half-forgotten realm of youth and experience the joy of discovery once more. I can't recommend these stories highly enough.
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This is an excellent example of BDSM erotica! The futuristic/scifi setting gives it an originality many such books lack. Micah endures harsh training & humiliation when he is made into a Personal Body Slave for the alien Kudites. When Micah finally ackowledges his submissive nature, he chooses life with his new master, but there are dangerous consequences...

My only criticism is the short length. The price is a little high for what is really a long novella. Despite that, I highly recommend show more the book. show less
There's a piece by 16-year-old Margaret Atwood! Eeep!

(Full disclosure: I received a free electronic ARC for review through Library Thing's Early Reviewers program. Trigger warning for rape and other forms of violence, as well as transphobic and homophobic bullying and suicide.)

I consider myself a bit of a Poe fangirl. Not to the tune of being able to reenact entire scenes from The Tomb of Ligeia or keeping a raven as a pet; but as in the first (and only!) gift my father every personally show more picked out for me was a leather-bound collection of Poe's complete works (I'm vegan now, but I keep it around for sentimental reasons) and I might, one day, name one of my rescue dogs Annabel Lee. It's fair to say that I'm interested, but not obsessed.

So when I spotted nEvermore! in Library Thing's July batch, it was Poe's name that grabbed by attention - but Margaret Atwood's that really sealed the deal. If I'm a bit of a Poe fangirl, then I'm freaking Annie Wilkes when it comes to Atwood. I exaggerate, but not by much.

Edited by Nancy Kilpatrick and Caro Soles, nEvermore!: Tales of Murder, Mystery & the Macabre features twenty-two stories that are inspired by Poe; contain elements from Poe's oeuvre; and/or are retellings of his stories. Some are more modern takes on Poe, while others employ similar language and have the same weirdly sinister vibe. If you're a hardcore Poe fan, probably you'll get more out of the stories than the casual or non-fan; there's a lot of name-dropping, as well as references to real, historical events from Poe's life. However, I wouldn't limit the audience just to those familiar with Poe; many of the stories are solid enough to stand on their own. Bonus points: Each story is prefaced with a brief introduction by the author(s), for added context.

And fellow Margaret Atwood fans? Definitely give it a spin, if only for "The Eye of Heaven" - written by a sixteen-year-old Margaret Atwood (!). Naturally she's humble about her contribution ("'The Eye of Heaven' might not be very good, though it's good enough for a sixteen-year-old") but it's among my favorites. I would pay to read her MadLibs, though, so grain of salt.

As with many anthologies, it's a bit of a mixed bag; there are some truly wonderful stories here, a few I didn't really care for, and a large chunk that fall somewhere in the middle. (I tried to avoid any major spoilers in the story summaries, but please skip them if you'd rather read the collection with virgin eyes.)

"A Rather Scholarly View of Edgar Allen Poe, Genre-Crosser" by Uwe Sommerlad - The title pretty much says it all. DNF, but mostly because I wasn't in the mood to read a non-fiction essay about Poe. Just give me the stories please!

"The Gold Bug Conundrum" by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro - A wealthy video game developer buys a dilapidated estate on a Caribbean Island located in the Bermuda Triangle, as it's rumored to be the inspiration for Edgar Allen Poe's "The Gold Bug." That, and hidden pirate treasure! Needless to say, the transaction doesn't end well. 2/5 stars. The beginning reads like an HGTV script, and the climax is rather underwhelming.

"Street of the Dead House" by Robert Lopresti - When hunters murder his mom, the young orangutan Jupiter goes to live with the Professor, who meddles with his brain (presumably, to make him smarter) and teaches him to sign. A visiting sailor from France, taken with the friendly primate, kills the Professor and kidnaps Jupiter, hoping to sell him to a zoo in Paris. When Jupiter refuses to cooperate, the two hatch a plan to steal an elderly lady's gold so that Jupiter can pay his fare back to Borneo. 5/5 stars. Jupiter gives me all the feels, you guys.

"Naomi" by Christopher Rice - The narrator's niece, a young trans woman, committed suicide after the bullying at school became too much to bear. Yet her ringtone - a bouncy pop number that triggered the worst of the abuse - lives on, driving her tormentors to take their own lives as well. 5/5 stars.

"Finding Ulalume" by Lisa Morton - The narrator's sister Anna went missing in Weir Forest when they were just twelve and thirteen years old. Decades have passed, and the narrator - now a search and rescue volunteer - has been summoned to the forest to find a missing team of surveyors. 4/5 stars.

"Obsession with the Bloodstained Door" by Rick Chiantaretto - As a child, the narrator becomes lost in a sinister, mysterious mansion; in his many years of wandering, he's only encountered one locked door that he cannot breach. It becomes his obsession. 3/5 stars.

"The Lighthouse" by Barbara Fradkin - It's 1942 and World War II rages on. 18-year-old Sammy, an aspiring writer, is sent to help his uncle maintain the lighthouse on Quirpon Island (Newfoundland). One foggy night, Uncle Nat goes missing - and a strange soldier (a Nazi deserter?) washes up on the shore. Is this a case of life mimicking art? The story features a frustratingly abrupt ending, just like the original. 4/5 stars.

"The Masques of Amanda Llado" by Thomas S. Roche - A disgruntled music critic lures his ex-boss - a postmodern frat boy from a failed tech startup - to his basement warehouse with the promise of a rare Amanda Llado album. Needless to say, none of us will miss the dudebro. 5/5 stars.

"Atargatis" by Robert Bose - Star's great-grandfather passes away, leaving her a locket that bears the face of a mermaid - and contains a mysterious key. His last word to her? "Atargatis." 5/5 stars.

"The Ravens of Consequence" by Carol Weekes and Michael Kelly - An old hermit is plagued by memories of a family he never had. Or did he? 4/5 stars.

"Annabel Lee" by Nancy Holder - A retelling of "Annabel Lee" from Annabel's perspective, this story also incorporates some elements from Poe's other works. 5/5 stars.

"Dinner with Mamalou" by J. Madison Davis - The CEO of the Makadam Energy (evil megacorp incarnate!) agrees to a sit-down dinner with Mrs. Bertrand, aka "Mamalou," the matriarch of the backwater town she calls home. On the menu: a discussion of the six deaths in St. Germain Parish since the company began fracking there. Also: revenge! 3/5 stars. The villains are a little too cartoonish for me.

"The Deave Lane" by Michael Jecks - An archaeologist's worst nightmare comes true when she's called to investigate a body found buried in the mors - and stumbles right into the midst of a pagan death cult. 3/5 stars.

"133" by Richard Christian Matheson - The Resurrectionist's Guide to the Death Penalty. 3/5 stars.

"Afterlife" by William F. Nolan, Jason V. Brock, and Sunni K. Brock - Explores "the idea that Poe could become trapped in the physical space of his own letters" - specifically, those thought to be forged by Rufus Griswold and burned by Charles Leland. 3/5 stars.

"The Drowning City" by Loren Rhoads - How to outwit a siren using modern technology. The futuristic look at Venice is both lovely and heartbreaking. 3/5 stars.

"The Orange Cat" by Kelley Armstrong - An abused cat refuses to cast his one good eye away from his cruel owner - even after he's been euthanized and had his bashed in as part of a double murder. Gabriel Walsh (of Armstrong's Cainsville series) is on the case. 4/5 stars.

"The Inheritance" by Jane Petersen Burfield - Annabel the raven exacts her revenge on the boys responsible for her death - from beyond the grave. 3/5 stars.

"Sympathetic Impulses" by David McDonald - In trying to uncover how a captured spy withstands torture, an Inquisitor unwittingly becomes the means by which he does so. 3/5 stars.

"Asylum" by Colleen Anderson - A vamp with a taste for the crazies happens upon an asylum that's been taken over by the lunatics. 3/5 stars.

"The Return of Berenice" by Tanith Lee - A retelling of "Berenice" in which the titular bride is actually a vampire - and Egaeus has condemned his cousin to a fate worse than (un)death by stealing her most valuable asset. 3/5 stars.

"The Eye of Heaven" by Margaret Atwood - A young man is haunted by the eyes of those he's killed - fishes and family members alike. 5/5 stars. It's Margaret Fucking Atwood, yo!

http://www.easyvegan.info/2015/08/19/nevermore-edited-by-nancy-kilpatrick-and-ca...
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This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Thomas S. Roche Contributor
Gary Bowen Contributor
Marsh Cassady Contributor
Lars Eighner Contributor
David Laurents Contributor
Tanith Lee Contributor
Loren Rhoads Contributor
Lisa Morton Contributor
David McDonald Contributor
Robert Lopresti Contributor
Jason V. Brock Contributor
Colleen Anderson Contributor
Sunni K. Brock Contributor
Uwe Sommerlad Contributor
Carol Weekes Contributor
Robert Bose Contributor
Margaret Atwood Contributor
Rick Chiantaretto Contributor
William F. Nolan Contributor
Kelley Armstrong Contributor
Nancy Holder Contributor
Barbara Fradkin Contributor
Christopher Rice Contributor
Michael Jecks Contributor
Michael Kelly Contributor
J. Madison Davis Contributor
Robin Wayne Bailey Contributor
Mike Dubson Contributor
Samuel R. Delany Contributor
David Roddis Contributor
Edmund White Contributor
Sean Martin Contributor
David May Contributor
Timothy Findley Contributor
Randy Nunn Contributor
Charlee Jacob Contributor
Jeffrey N. McMahon Contributor
Mike Montgomery Contributor
Riall Kane Contributor
Ian Young Composer
Lucy Taylor Contributor
H. Andrew Lynch Contributor
John Preston Contributor
Jeffrey A. Stadt Contributor

Statistics

Works
23
Also by
11
Members
382
Popularity
#63,244
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
43
ISBNs
37
Favorited
1

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