Waif

Waif

WaifTitle: Waif
Author: Samantha Kolesnik
First Published: December 1, 2021
Publisher: Grindhouse Press
Pages: 116
Genre: Horror, LGBTQ, Transgressive Fiction
Format: Ebook
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Rating:


Synopsis:

Angela has everything she thought she ever wanted—a successful husband, a lavish house, and a bottomless fortune.

But the sight of a strange man in a grocery store one night reawakens her dormant sexuality and soon Angela embarks on a dangerous descent into the world of underground pornography and back-alley plastic surgery.

As the stakes get higher, long-buried memories resurface and Angela finds herself enamored with Reena, a fetish film performer. With some help from a queer gang called The Waifs, Angela is forced to make the decision between her unhappy upper-class life and the treacherous world of underground film.

Buy the Book: Amazon

Review

This novella has reminded me what I love about horror – a genre full of stories that are dark, challenging, and transgressive, able to examine the absolute worst of humanity. Waif is an pitch dark horror story about a woman named Angela who is dissatisfied with her marriage. The tension between Angela and her abusive husband is chilling.

This is the story of a woman teetering on the edge of complete collapse, it’s a gritty story, seething with malice. The journey that followed was one of extremities, of recklessness and self-discovery. I was in awe of the way that Kolesnik weaved this narrative together, plunging the reader into the absolute depths of human depravity and come out with something beautiful.

I fell absolutely in love with this little novella, and Kolesnik has quickly become an author that I’ll read anything she chooses to publish.

Quote

“The world of men required certain sacrifices of me and I had simply tired of making them. It was high time for men to sacrifice for me.”

Content Warnings

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About the Author

About Samantha Kolesnik

Samantha Kolesnik is an award-winning writer and film director living in central Pennsylvania. Her screenplays and short films have been recognized at top genre film festivals and her fiction has appeared in notable literary magazines including The Bitter Oleander, The William and Mary Review, and Barnstorm. She is one of the co-founders of the Women in Horror Film Festival. True Crime is her first novel.


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