Praise for The Angel of Indian Lake
“Riotously entertaining . . . This is a worthy finale to a series that has expanded the horizons of contemporary horror.”
—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
“It is the perfect conclusion to this trilogy of ghosts and monsters, both earthly and supernatural, and of secrets that must finally be brought to the surface. A story masterfully told, but most of all, one that provides a final girl to cherish . . . Jones has given the world a gift, an epic tale for the ages, both a violent, high-octane slasher and a frank, thought-provoking indictment of the U.S., past and present.”
—Library Journal, Starred Review
"A determinedly feminist reexamination of the concept of the Final Girl."
—Paste Magazine
"Jones makes executing a satisfying horror trilogy look easy, in a way that very few authors to date have managed."
—Grimdark Magazine
"The literary equivalent of a garage rock recording that also turns out to be gloriously baroque, and accomplishes the trick of holding a mirror up to the horror genre’s history while also reading like little else you’ll encounter."
—Reactor Magazine
"Stephen's writing is a chainsaw.”
—Grady Hendrix, New York Times bestselling author of The Final Girl Support Group
Praise for The Indian Lake Trilogy
“Horror fans [will] be blown away by this audacious extravaganza.”
—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
“This extraordinary novel is an essential purchase.”
—Kirkus, Starred Review
"Stephen's writing is a chainsaw and every sentence in this book drips with blood, every paragraph is clotted with skin, and every period is a bullethole. He makes me feel like an amateur."
—Grady Hendrix, New York Times bestselling author of The Final Girl Support Group
"A homage to slasher films that also manages to defy and transcend genre. You don't have to be a slasher fan to read My Heart is a Chainsaw, but I guarantee that you will be after you read it."
—Alma Katsu, author of The Deep and The Hunger
"Brutal, beautiful, and unforgettable, My Heart is a Chainsaw is a visceral ride from start to finish. A bloody love letter to slasher fans, it's everything I never knew I needed in a horror novel."
—Gwendolyn Kiste, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Rust Maidens
"Stephen Graham Jones can't miss. My Heart is a Chainsaw is a painful drama about trauma, mental health, and the heartache of yearning to belong . . . twisted into a DNA helix with encyclopedic Slasher movie obsession and a frantic, gory whodunnit mystery, with an ending both savage and shocking. Don't say I didn't warn you!”
—Christopher Golden, New York Times bestselling author of Ararat and Red Hands
“An easy contender for Best of the Year. A love letter to (and an examination of) both the horror genre and the American West, it left me stunned and applauding.”
—Brian Keene, World Horror Grandmaster Award and two Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Rising and The Damned Highway
“Stephen Graham Jones masterfully navigates the shadowy paths between mystery and horror. An epic entry in the slasher canon."
—Laird Barron, author of Swift to Chase
"An intense homage to the classic horror films of yore."
—Polygon
"At once an homage to the horror genre and a searing indictment of the brutal legacy of Indigenous genocide in America, Stephen Graham Jones’ My Heart is a Chainsaw delivers both dazzling thrills and visceral commentary . . . Jones takes grief, gentrification and abuse to task in a tale that will terrify you and break your heart all at the same time."
—Time
"Sneaking in right at the end of the summer is the best horror novel of the year . . . A loving homage to meta-horror classics like Scream and Cabin in the Woods. Hilarious at one turn and outrageously gruesome at the next, it’ll be the perfect book to read after dark over Labor Day weekend."
—GQ
"Stephen Graham Jones continues his reign as a horror maestro with My Heart is a Chainsaw. This brutal homage to slasher films focuses on Jade, a young half-Indian woman who finds comfort in horror movies after feeling abandoned by her family and her town."
—PopSugar
"Stephen Graham Jones is a star when it comes to melding horror with literary fiction, exploring themes of colonialism and racisms alongside Indigenous experiences. He hasn’t been described as the Jordan Peele of horror fiction for nothing . . . A masterpiece."
—Book Riot