Praise for RED X
“David Demchuk’s cult queer horror novel RED X has already earned the kind of reputation most horror writers spend decades chasing, and its June reissue is primed to introduce an entirely new audience to its unnerving power… What makes RED X especially exciting isn’t just its supernatural menace—though there’s plenty of that—but the way Demchuk folds autobiography, queer history and cultural memory into the architecture of the horror itself.”
—The Seattle Times
“Demchuk wows with this genuinely hair-raising queer horror novel…Demchuk masterfully combines pure human horror—homophobic violence, the AIDS epidemic—with supernatural scares to keep the pages flying. This will have readers sleeping with the lights on.”
—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
“When they speak of seminal works of queer literature a hundred years from now, David Demchuk’s RED X will most assuredly be included in that conversation. A tremendously influential novel so arresting, so brutal and yet so delicate that its labyrinthine complexity should be studied and praised. A merciless and truly daring masterpiece of queer fiction.”
—Eric LaRocca, author of Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke
“One of the greatest horror novels of all time, period. Fight me. It’s exactly the book we need right now: scary, angry, horny, and packed with memorable monsters both supernatural and systemic.”
—Sam J. Miller, author of The Blade Between
“Can a horror novel be too disturbing? David Demchuk’s RED X begs that question, not because of any excess of gore or violence but because of its singular and unflinching dark vision. That’s a good thing—too much contemporary horror fiction plays for easy shocks and even easier sentimental tears, and Demchuk is clearly after something deeper.”
—Toronto Star
“A book full of heart and righteous fury, an urban nightmare with some retro-horror stylings that sidesteps that genre’s usual pitfalls of splatter and pessimism to deliver a story of emotional heft and guarded optimism. While it’s relentless and can be incredibly disturbing, there are also moments of beauty, hope, and a certain melancholy. It’s a complex, disturbing, challenging, and compulsively readable work that commands your attention, and indeed deserves it.”
—Tor Nightfire