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Through a Mirror, Darkly (Clifton Heights Book 3) Kindle Edition

4.4 out of 5 stars 90 ratings

Every town harbors secrets. Kevin Ellison is about to discover those that lurk in the shadows of Clifton Heights.

What if a book delves into the lives of the very town you live in? Reveals to you some personal stories of people you know? Or thought you knew.

Bookstore owner Kevin Ellison faces this truth when a mysterious book shows up.

There are a lot more truths in the books we read, than we’d like to admit.

Through a Mirror, Darkly is a Supernatural Thriller collection masked as a novel. With elements of mystery, suspense, and otherworldly horror, Through a Mirror, Darkly successfully delves into the worlds of Lovecraft, Grant, and the mysterious Carcosa.

Arcane Delights. Clifton Heights' premier rare and used bookstore. In it, new owner Kevin Ellison has inherited far more than a family legacy, for inside are tales that will amaze, astound, thrill...and terrify:

  • An ancient evil thirsty for lost souls.
  • A very different kind of taxi service with destinations not on any known map.
  • Three coins that grant the bearer's fondest wish,
  • and a father whose crippling grief gives birth to something dark and hungry.


Through a Mirror, Darkly carries on the literary tradition of Stephen King, Robert McCammon, Ray Bradbury, and Charles L. Grant.

Proudly brought to you by
Crystal Lake Publishing – Tales from the Darkest Depths

Interview with the author:

What makes Through a Mirror, Darkly so special:

Kevin Lucia: For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face - 1 Corinthians 13:12. It's the idea that in this world, we only see each other “through a glass, darkly” – we don't fully see each other, or understand each other, or the world around us, because we can't: we have finite minds, trying to understand the infinite. But someday – “then face to face” – we'll know all there is to know, and see each other clearly. Again, my take on the supernatural is that strange and explained things happen every day – things slip through – and we can't understand them, and won't understand them, until someday, perhaps in another world, things are revealed.

Tell us more about your lead character?

Kevin Lucia: Kevin Ellison, former English teacher at All Saints High, has just retired from teaching to take over his recently deceased father's used bookstore, Arcane Delights. A fledgling author himself, in prepping the store for its grand reopening, he discovers a strange box of donations he doesn't remember getting. In it he finds a journal of stories about Clifton Heights – someone trying their hand at fiction? After he reads them, however, he's haunted by whether or not the stories they contain are fiction, or real...

Through a Mirror, Darkly eBook categories:

  • Short Story collection
  • Suspense Thriller
  • Supernatural Thriller
  • Occult
  • Mystery
  • US Horror Fiction
  • Paranormal
  • Unexplained
  • Psychological Thriller
  • Horror
  • Lovecraftian
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From the Publisher

Kevin Lucia
Kevin Lucia

More about Kevin Lucia

Kevin Lucia is the eBook and trade paperback editor at Cemetery Dance Publications. His short fiction has been published in many venues, most notably with Neil Gaiman, Clive Barker, David Morell, Peter Straub, Bentley Little, and Robert McCammon. To learn more, visit: kevinlucia.blogspot.com

Editorial Reviews

Review

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ "Kevin Lucia writes my favorite kind of horror, the kind not enough folks are writing anymore." - Kealan Patrick Burke, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Turtle Boy and Kin.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ "Through a Mirror, Darkly
serves as Kevin Lucia's early-warning system to the horror field - Brace yourselves, folks." - Gary Braunbeck, Bram Stoker Award-winner of To Each Their Darkness, Destinations Unknown, and the forthcoming A Cracked and Broken Path.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ "
Literate and stylish, yet fast-paced and accessible, Through a Mirror, Darkly is a thoroughly engrossing read. Kevin Lucia is a major new voice in the horror genre." - Jonathan Janz , author of The Nightmare Girl.

" Through a Mirror, Darkly
earns Kevin Lucia a literary place alongside these enduring philosophical horror crafters." - Mort Castle

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ "
He is a skillful guide through Clifton Heights, telling tales of mystery and horror in a town where dark secrets and ancient evils lurk to prey upon those who read Through a Mirror, Darkly." - Rena Mason, Bram Stoker Award® winning author of The Evolutionist.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ "
With Through a Mirror, Darkly, Kevin Lucia proves once again that it's only a matter of time before he's one of the genre's biggest names." - James Newman, author of The Wicked and Animosity.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00Y348FU6
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Crystal Lake Publishing
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ June 5, 2015
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 5.0 MB
  • Simultaneous device usage ‏ : ‎ Unlimited
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 304 pages
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0994662651
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Book 3 of 5 ‏ : ‎ Clifton Heights
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 90 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
90 global ratings

Review this product

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Customers say

Customers enjoy this collection of horror tales, with one noting how the stories take place in the same town and have creepy connections. The book features vivid characters and amazing writing, and customers find it both entertaining and chilling, with one describing it as an atmospheric horror experience.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

11 customers mention "Suspenseful stories"11 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the collection of horror tales, with one customer noting how the stories take place in the same town, creating creepy connections throughout.

"...The stories themselves are loosely connected and Lucia has also woven in themes from Chambers' The King in Yellow mythology, although you don't need..." Read more

"I was very happy with these stories. Kevin writes the kind of macabre, eerie and atmospheric horror that I crave...." Read more

"...The stories are a strange kind of familiar, like something you can't quite remember from the past that's still squirming about somewhere, and for me..." Read more

"...I owe him a debt of gratitude. I loved this book! It consists of six long stories/short novellas, all intertwined around the fictitious community of..." Read more

10 customers mention "Readability"10 positive0 negative

Customers find the book highly readable and enjoyable, with one customer noting they were enthralled throughout the story.

"...THROUGH A MIRROR, DARKLY is written skillfully and the result is both entertaining and chilling...." Read more

"...Reading this straight through worked best for me. I was kept enthralled throughout and it created a bigger picture and more connection for me...." Read more

"...This book is excellent. The characters, whether featuring prominently or only for a few sentences, are all incredibly human and believable...." Read more

"...I owe him a debt of gratitude. I loved this book!..." Read more

4 customers mention "Character development"4 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the vivid characters in the book, with one customer noting how well it captures the sense of loss experienced by the characters.

"...featuring prominently or only for a few sentences, are all incredibly human and believable...." Read more

"...Satisfying and dark. Lucia captures well the sense of loss of his characters, transforming grief and hurt into terror...." Read more

"...Four novellas tied together by geography, history, characters, and the cosmic. First I've read by Kevin, won't be the last." Read more

"Not perfect, but a perfectly good read. Vivid characters, interesting stories, with a uniting, underlying theme. I really couldn't stop reading." Read more

4 customers mention "Writing quality"4 positive0 negative

Customers praise the writing quality of the book.

"...of how Lucia did - from start to finish, THROUGH A MIRROR, DARKLY is written skillfully and the result is both entertaining and chilling...." Read more

"...In short, liked the writing, liked the concept, enjoyed the presentation and will likely buy other books by the same author...." Read more

"...They were thoughtfully written. They told tales of love and death and life inbetween. And all mesmerized...." Read more

"...Well-written, well-paced and building a slow feeling of dread in each piece, Lucia's evocative writing both adds to the canon of those following in..." Read more

3 customers mention "Chilling content"3 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the chilling content of the book, with one describing it as atmospheric horror.

"...DARKLY is written skillfully and the result is both entertaining and chilling...." Read more

"...Kevin writes the kind of macabre, eerie and atmospheric horror that I crave...." Read more

"Another chilling Trip to Clifton Heights!..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2015
    My first encounter with Kevin Lucia's fiction was in THINGS SLIP THROUGH, which I enjoyed more than enough to guarantee I'd pick this up as soon as I could. And I'm happy to say it hooked me immediately and became the only book I read until I finished it the day after beginning it (which is both unusual and quick for me, respectively!). I regretted being too tired last night to continue reading, but I'd reached that point where I re-read the same paragraph multiple times and I know recall and enjoyment would suffer if I pushed it. I was still tempted to do so!

    THROUGH A MIRROR, DARKLY is a framework story. Both the intro and ending bit ("Arcane Delights") organize the several lengthier pieces within, which all take place in the Adirondack town of Clifton Heights. The stories themselves are loosely connected and Lucia has also woven in themes from Chambers' The King in Yellow mythology, although you don't need any foreknowledge of that to enjoy these stories as they are self-contained. I don't always love KIY motifs as I think they tend to be overdone, but that's the complete opposite of how Lucia did - from start to finish, THROUGH A MIRROR, DARKLY is written skillfully and the result is both entertaining and chilling. Lucia distinguishes himself in how he handles the frame-story structure in that at the end you wonder just how real the bits within really are in the context of the overarching framework - just like the main character in that superstructure is doing.

    Highly recommended.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on October 26, 2018
    I was very happy with these stories. Kevin writes the kind of macabre, eerie and atmospheric horror that I crave.

    I would loosely call this a story that embraces four shorter ones. Kevin inherits the Arcane Delights bookstore from his father. After a flood, it’s in need of TLC. In the midst of this work a strange box shows up on his desk. Upon opening it he discovers a journal or diary of sorts, containing four stories that, while separate, also tie into each other and the town.

    How Kevin’s story is connected to these entries is very well handled. And the town of Clifton Heights was actually a bit of a story in itself. Which I became to appreciate even more after I finished the book.

    Included are Suffer The Children Come Unto Me, Yellow Cab, Admit One and I Watered It, With Tears. Each of these entries has it’s own atmosphere. Some more macabre than horrific. And I liked all of them, with a couple standing out that extra bit more from the rest.

    Reading this straight through worked best for me. I was kept enthralled throughout and it created a bigger picture and more connection for me. Whether you read it in parts are all at once, I’m sure it’ll capture you too.
  • Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2015
    And Lucia paints with a broad spectrum of them in this book; The wide, twisting and otherworldly horrors of something Other, things outside of our reach or influence. The Taxi story, for me, was very reminiscent of certain Lovecraft stories where a mundane man either walks or trips into something so far out of his reach that he never realizes exactly how doomed he is until its far too late. This book is full of unsettling, of not-quite-right, of that horrible settling feeling in your gut when something is just universally wrong.

    Where it really blew me away was with the much more average horrors though, the quiet despair so deeply buried that its barely felt as more than a thrum in your bones, single-mindedness taken to absolute and almost fanatical extremes, wasting away beneath a life of silent failures and never-were's. This book is excellent. The characters, whether featuring prominently or only for a few sentences, are all incredibly human and believable. The stories are a strange kind of familiar, like something you can't quite remember from the past that's still squirming about somewhere, and for me that makes it so much better and so much more unsettling.

    All four of the stories, and the little bits of prologue and epilogue, are fantastic but the last one is unbelievable, and something I've honestly never read before.
    3 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2016
    From the reviews I was expecting more than I got from this book. That's not to say that it's a bad book, but it didn't quite work for me. It's a collection of shared theme short stories with a thin wrapper for some dark secrets in the town of Clifton Heights. The wrapper felt underdeveloped, so the meat was in the short stories and they're decent stories. They cover some classic horror situations, although they were of varying quality.

    The first story concerns an Iraq veteran Chaplain recovering from a supernatural sighting while on tour, only to have the horror seemingly follow him home. This was a predictable story with no real surprise - even for the reveal at the end, but quite well told. It did introduce me to an aspect of the authors writing that impacted my enjoyment of the stories - repetition.

    Repetition can be a powerful tool in story telling, it can lull the reader into false assumptions, it can reinforce core concepts, but it needs to be used sparingly. That isn't the case here, it is used far too often and isn't just repetition of concepts, but actual repetition of the same phrase - over and over again, It really spoiled the flow of the stories, and gave them an odd pacing. It also made them longer than they needed to be.

    My favourite story was the last one, which had a mysterious and short lived haunting. This had less of the aforementioned repetition and had a reasonably novel premise. As such it was a much tighter story and worked well.

    Overall it was worth reading, but felt that it needed much tighter development to really stand out.
    One person found this helpful
    Report

Top reviews from other countries

  • Amazon Customer
    1.0 out of 5 stars Over-styled
    Reviewed in Australia on October 28, 2019
    The story was about different writers telling a story about the same motif - but we got the exact same stylistic presentation of each one!
    What started out as interesting became unsatisfying real fast.
  • J. Everington
    4.0 out of 5 stars Readers will notice the legacy of the great Charles L
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 5, 2016
    Through A Mirror, Darkly is a dark and accomplished collection of interrelated novellas from Kevin Lucia, all set in the small American town of Clifton Heights. The stories are bookended by a framing narrative, the tales purporting to be read by the owner of the Arcane Delights bookstore after a manuscript mysteriously turns up in his store.

    Readers will notice the legacy of the great Charles L. Grant in this setup, and it's a tribute to Lucia's skills as a writer that his stories hold up against Grant's. The influence of King and especially Bradbury are also clear in the small-town setting and the readable yet evocative prose. Less integrated, perhaps, is the more overt references to the mythos of Chambers and Lovecraft that pop up. This may be personal taste, but I felt Lucia too accomplished a writer to need to lean so heavily on the work of others. Clifton Heights is such a well-imagined setting that it deserves its own mythos.

    The individual stories in the volume are nicely balanced and sequenced, with each shedding more light on Clifton Heights and a wider narrative, but still feeling distinctive in their own right. Opener Suffer The Children is an intriguing take on the Christian faith and personal loss, whilst Admit One tackles that evergreen horror theme of the dangers of getting what one wishes for. And I Watered It, With Tears has perhaps the most straight-forward horror plot here, as a group of strangers are trapped inside a civic centre and are gradually picked off one by one by something nightmarish inside. Despite a certain contrivance to the setup, once the piece hits its stride its a grimly effective piece of horror.

    Yellow Cab was my favourite piece, telling the story of a young taxi driver who picks up some very unusual fares in and around Clifton Heights. The driver's aimless life is nicely contrasted with the definite but nebulous destination his passengers ask him to head for... This story displayed all of Lucia's strengths, most prominently an expertly controlled sense of mounting, creeping dread.

    Overall, a great read.
  • Rowena Hoseason
    4.0 out of 5 stars The unseen side of everyday America
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 19, 2016
    An ordinary town in modern-day America hides dark secrets and the stirring of ancient evil. In this collection of linked short stories, author Kevin Lucia quietly and methodically explores the porous zones, those weakened areas where human greed and human need allow Something Other to extend into our reality.

    The result is an entertaining collection, an exploration both of social morality and situations with dark suggestions of Lovecroft-style creatures, scuttling just out of sight. There’s a very traditional feel to this collection; it’s old school ‘horror’ not modern spatter-shock. It echoes Stephen King, especially in its small-town setting, where young people on the cusp of adulthood encounter the creeping things which normally exist just out of sight.
    Some of the stories are a little over-explained; the author could pare things back a little and trust his audience to join the dots, rather than googling demonic names and reciting entire wiki entries to tie up every loose end. But overall the writing is atmospheric and engrossing; genuinely unsettling at times, and with an authentic voice of its own. The introduction holds a particular power of its own, the insidious dread of a young man that the neurological condition which unravelled his father’s identity might already be eating away at his own faculties.
    Then there’s the tale of a ten-time loser, a guy who can never hold down a job for more than a week, who holds a torch for a local beauty when she barely remembers his name – this story in particular is especially affecting. It suggests the possibility of redemption in the least likely places; an unusually uplifting sentiment for an anthology of insidious supernatural episodes.
    At the end, you’re left with the sense that the door into the otherworld has only been opened by a tiny fraction. Things with tentacles and bad intentions slither, just out of sight. Hopefully, the author will return to explore them in more depth in future.
    7/10

    There's a longer version of this review over at murdermayhemandmore.net
  • Techno Hippy
    3.0 out of 5 stars Okay horror
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 4, 2016
    From the reviews I was expecting more than I got from this book. That's not to say that it's a bad book, but it didn't quite work for me. It's a collection of shared theme short stories with a thin wrapper for some dark secrets in the town of Clifton Heights. The wrapper felt underdeveloped, so the meat was in the short stories and they're decent stories. They cover some classic horror situations, although they were of varying quality.

    The first story concerns an Iraq veteran Chaplain recovering from a supernatural sighting while on tour, only to have the horror seemingly follow him home. This was a predictable story with no real surprise - even for the reveal at the end, but quite well told. It did introduce me to an aspect of the authors writing that impacted my enjoyment of the stories - repetition.

    Repetition can be a powerful tool in story telling, it can lull the reader into false assumptions, it can reinforce core concepts, but it needs to be used sparingly. That isn't the case here, it is used far too often and isn't just repetition of concepts, but actual repetition of the same phrase - over and over again, It really spoiled the flow of the stories, and gave them an odd pacing. It also made them longer than they needed to be.

    My favourite story was the last one, which had a mysterious and short lived haunting. This had less of the aforementioned repetition and had a reasonably novel premise. As such it was a much tighter story and worked well.

    Overall it was worth reading, but felt that it needed much tighter development to really stand out.
  • Pamela Scott
    4.0 out of 5 stars Delightful dark tales
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 14, 2021
    I’ve enjoyed other collection of the author’s short horror fiction set around Clifton Heights. Through a Mirror, Darkly is an enjoyable as other collections I’ve read by the author. The stories offers what I consider excellent examples of horror fiction. They are strange, sinister and many shades of darkness and a lot of fun.

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