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[Book Review] Bloody and Heartfelt ‘My Heart Is a Chainsaw’ Recontextualizes the Slasher Formula

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Author Stephen Graham Jones loves slashers. Not only was his 2020 novel The Only Good Indians a slasher at its core, but slashers permeate every element of his latest. My Heart Is a Chainsaw showcases Jones’s extensive knowledge of the horror subgenre through his protagonist, delivering a captivating story that also works as a thought-provoking examination of the familiar formula while recontextualizing slashers to forge new ground. It’s both a heartfelt love letter and a fresh take, making you fall in love while shredding your heart.

Jade Daniels is an angry, half-Indian outcast on the verge of high school graduation in the small lakeside town of Proofrock. She has an absent mother, an abusive father, and not a single friend. The only constant in her life is her love of horror movies, especially slashers. She writes about them concerning Proofrock’s history in school papers and talks about them to anyone that’ll listen. As a new luxury community gets constructed across the lake, marking the start of gentrification as affluent neighbors move in, blood starts to spill in Indian Lake’s waters. Jade senses a real-life slasher unfolding and employs her encyclopedic knowledge to find her final girl and save the town. If only anyone will believe her.

Jones weaves complex layers to Jade’s tale, using his distinct rhythm and present tense writing style that sets his prose apart. Toggling between his third-person prose and first-person papers in the voice of a young teen, it can take careful attention to parse the necessary details for the story. His protagonist doesn’t fit the description of your average final girl, and she knows it. Jade makes for a fascinating unreliable narrator, but not in your conventional sense. Her observations of Proofrock, the town’s haunted past, and the potential bloodbath looming in its near future are solid. At least based on her working knowledge of both the area and of horror. But her self-awareness seems far less dependable. Instead, Jade seems unwilling to face certain realities, preferring to live in the removed world of slashers. That colors every interaction with supporting characters, including her chosen final girl, new girl Letha Mondragon.

As Jade tries to apply the standard formula to Proofrock, the narrative develops intriguing nuance and subtext. Chainsaw delivers every bit of the gory horror and slasher mayhem fans would want on a surface level. It’s anchored by Jade’s blood-drenched yet powerful journey that reveals a deeply broken girl desperate for connection. Subtextually, Jones also seems to be engaging in a conversation about the subgenre itself and its tropes. That Jones names each chapter after a slasher movie is the easy reference, but the way he reflects upon the psychology of the genre through his protagonist and her reads on it offers an insight I wasn’t expecting.

Chainsaw doesn’t just reserve the intensity for the gore or a heroine that refuses to see herself as such. But for the emotional depths as well. Jones lulls the reader into submission through Jade’s sheer will and confidence in her horror knowledge. That’s precisely when he pulls the rug out from under you, introducing sharp left turns in the narrative more than once. Jade knows everything there is about slashers but not life. Similarly, Jones’s latest adheres to slasher convention until it doesn’t, shocking you with a cold dose of realism.

It’s an ode to the slasher, a tale of revenge and redemption, and a coming-of-age journey that challenges and disturbs. It’s atmospheric and strange and builds to a gruesome finale that holds you firmly in its grip. For anyone who’s ever found salvation in horror, like a cherished form of escapism that makes you feel seen, My Heart Is a Chainsaw slays.

My Heart Is a Chainsaw is available for pre-order and releases on August 31.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

Books

Don Coscarelli’s ‘PHICTION: Tales from the World of Phantasm’ Now Available in Paperback!

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This year marks the 45th anniversary of Don Coscarelli’s horror classic Phantasm, and Coscarelli returns to that iconic universe with his brand new book PHICTION: Tales from the World of PhantasmPHICTION explores characters and stories from the Phantasm universe, with an introduction by best-selling author Joe R. Lansdale (Bubba Ho-Tep).

In the wake of a hardcover limited edition version of PHICTION being put up for grabs at a special event back in March, the paperback version of the book is now available.

You can grab your paperback copy from Amazon today!

Coscarelli notes within the pages of the book that his days of directing Phantasm movies are behind him, but PHICTION is without question the next best thing. What you’re getting here are SIX brand new stories written by Coscarelli himself, each of them expanding upon characters from the movies. The stories wonderfully add to the lore of the Phantasm Universe, and since they’re entirely in-canon, they’re guaranteed to change the way you watch the movies.

If you’re a Phantasm fan who’s hungry for more, PHICTION essentially delivers an entire anthology series of fresh tales, straight from the creator’s mind. It’s an absolute must-read.

Here’s everything you need to know about the new book…

In 1979, filmmaker Don Coscarelli (Bubba Ho-tep, The Beastmaster) wrote and directed what became one of the seminal sci-fi/horror films of that era, Phantasm. The film was a worldwide theatrical success and spawned four acclaimed sequels.

For the first time in the history of horror cinema, a celebrated filmmaker of a cult-classic horror film series has continued the adventure by swapping mediums and personally authoring a series of fictional works exploring in detail the characters he originally created. Coscarelli has now returned to the world of Phantasm to tell more tales of these inspiring phantasmic heroes.

PHICTION comprises six stories set in the expansive Phantasm world that have never been told before…

In Life and Death in the ‘Nam, we explore the origin story of our favorite ice cream vendor hero Reggie and his first encounter with the supernatural forces of evil in the jungles of the Vietnam war. It’s a two-fisted tale of a young man enduring the horrors of war and at the same time facing down the horrors of the unknown.

In Behind the Mortuary Door, we learn the secrets of the embalming trade from one of the most memorable characters from the original film.

In He Was Home Alone, we revisit the young boy Tim, prior to the events from Phantasm III, and how, using only his wits and guile, he survives against unspeakable horrors.

In Tobe, we follow the trail of one of Phantasm’s forgotten characters as he witnesses the key events of that film from an entirely different perspective.

In The Rocky Road, we track the events of one of the Phantasm saga’s fan-favorite characters, the nunchuck-wielding Rocky as she’s mustered out of the armed services and travels the backroads of the rural South in the early 90’s. In a desperate search to find her family she encounters love, vengeance and horror, frequently reacting in the only way she knows how, with her fists and her feet.

And finally in Escape From New York, we join another Phantasm fan-favorite character, the diminutive Chunk from Phantasm Ravager as he attempts to flee his home in the big city from the horror of an oncoming apocalypse. Along the way he bonds with some unexpected allies on a thrilling quest for survival.

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