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A Nest of Nightmares

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In Lisa Tuttle’s stories, the everyday domestic world of her female protagonists is invaded by the bizarre, the uncanny, the horrific. In ‘Bug House’, a woman who goes to visit her aunt is shocked to find she is dying – but even more shocking is what is killing her. The divorcing couple in ‘Community Property’ arrive at a macabre solution for how to divide ownership of a beloved pet. In ‘Flying to Byzantium’, a writer travelling to a science fiction convention finds herself caught in a strange and terrifying hell. The thirteen tales in this collection are highly original and extremely chilling, and they reveal Tuttle to be a master of contemporary horror fiction.

Never before published in the United States and highly sought-after by collectors, A Nest of Nightmares (1986) is a classic of modern horror. This new edition features the original paperback cover art by Nick Bantock and a new introduction by Will Errickson.

237 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published December 31, 1986

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About the author

Lisa Tuttle

275 books395 followers
(Wife of Colin Murray) aka Maria Palmer (house pseudonym).

Lisa Tuttle taught a science fiction course at the City Lit College, part of London University, and has tutored on the Arvon courses. She was residential tutor at the Clarion West SF writing workshop in Seattle, USA. She has published six novels and two short story collections. Many of her books have been translated into French and German editions.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 258 reviews
Profile Image for Justin Tate.
Author 7 books1,396 followers
January 6, 2020
It’s rare for short story collections to be gripping throughout. Most of them are like pop albums--one or two good entries and a bunch of filler. Even great short story writers, such as Raymond Carver, Shirley Jackson, Alice Munro and E.A. Poe, have published duds bearing their name. And, to be fair, I’m sure Lisa Tuttle has written clunkers as well. There just aren't any included here.

A Nest of Nightmares, first published in 1986 and not ever in the United States until now, is a superb collection of short fiction because all 13 stories are deliciously readable from beginning to end, and because of Tuttle’s unique voice. Particularly in eerie fiction, the female perspective is rare. It’s an overwhelmingly dude genre to be sure, but even among horror’s many women authors, I think there is a hesitancy to write macabre tales on topics such as rape, motherhood, sisterhood, and other situations distinctly outside of the male experience. Very few examples come to mind, at least.

The stories in here are an earthy blend of natural and supernatural. Tuttle takes psychological dilemmas--such as returning home after thriving in the big city--and makes a nightmare of it. Family secrets are discovered--in a haunted house. Concern for your child’s safety--with ghosts. Loneliness--with bird monsters. Real, internal fears manifest themselves into shadowy, symbolic figures, creating a spine-tingle that creeps far deeper than any run-of-the-mill bogeyman.

In addition to the exceptional plots, characterization, tension, and other artistic elements, it’s worth praising Tuttle’s structure. Each story is impeccably paced, with a prompt introduction to premise and effortless world-building in only a few sharp sentences. Characters leap into being without unnecessary exertion. The dramas conclude at precisely the right time in ways that are satisfying, but without embellishment.

Short stories are so difficult to write because of structure. If it goes on too long it loses sizzle, if it’s too short it lacks purpose. If it doesn’t have a crisp ending it comes across incomplete. Again, A Nest of Nightmares succeeds every time--never too short or too long, never underplayed or gratuitous. In my opinion, that’s nothing short of a miracle.

Given the top-tier quality of this collection, it amazes me that it’s taken 34 years to be printed in the U.S., or that it hasn’t been routinely hailed as canon horror. By now there should be dozens of reprints, a Penguin Classics edition, and collectible leather-bound copies. Instead, it’s been out-of-print for decades and, until now, an ultra-rare find among collectors. Valancourt Books consistently brings back forgotten works that should be classic, but this might be their best contribution to letters yet. Truly a must-read for all fans of the macabre.
Profile Image for Sadie Hartmann.
Author 24 books7,245 followers
November 25, 2020
Writing up my review for SCREAM Mag now but if you desire a collection of feminist horror, all stories involving a female protagonist in various disturbing situations...this one is for you.
Profile Image for La loca de los libros .
447 reviews432 followers
November 12, 2021
Me encanta leer terror, no es nada nuevo, y para este Halloween decidí aventurarme en esta fantástica antología.
Se trata de una magnífica recopilación que a pesar de datar del '86 se hace muy amena de leer y no se notan los años transcurridos.

🔸Trece relatos perturbadores repletos de denuncia social, donde las mujeres son las principales protagonistas, y que te pondrán los pelos de punta en más de una ocasión.
Resumiré brevemente cada uno de ellos y mis impresiones tras leerlos.

🕷Nido de bichos.
La joven Ellen se traslada a la destartalada e infestada de bichos casa de su tía tras separarse de su marido, donde se esconde una sorpresa nada agradable. Hasta picores me han entrado. ¡Buenísimo!

🍔 Hamburguesa de carne de muñeca. Inquietante relato en el que la pequeña Karen se percata de que sus muñecas están siendo "secuestradas".

🐕 Bienes compartidos.
Un matrimonio en pleno divorcio y con un elemento en discordia que no es otro que su can con nombre de teleñeco,  Gonzo. Durísimo 💔, necesario y de una realidad aplastante. Un relato 10.

✈ Volando a Bizancio.
Sheila, una joven escritora de ciencia ficción, viaja a su ciudad natal a una convención pero nada será como ella se lo espera. 
El que menos me ha entusiasmado del conjunto.
"Sabían que era distinta. Sabía que era mejor que las demás. Lo difícil había sido agarrarse a ese sentimiento, y resistir a todos los que se empeñaban en convertirla en alguien del montón."

⚛ Recorriendo el laberinto.
En un viaje por Inglaterra, unos jóvenes, Phil y Amy, observan algo realmente extraño en el campo, durante su estancia en un hostal.
Me ha parecido muy inquietante y desolador.

🐎 El señor de los caballos.
Maldiciones indias y caballos, una buena conjunción. Me ha encantado.

👧 La otra madre.
Extrañas apariciones y mitología galesa.
Desgarrador.

💫 Necesidad.
Corey nunca pensó que entablaría una curiosa amistad mientras paseaba por el cementerio. Muy bueno también.

🚪 La memoria de la madera.
Helen y Rob adquieren un arcón antiguo que esconde un olor muy desagradable que parece desaparecer.
¡Los pelos de punta con este relato! 👌😱

👭 Cuando te necesita un amigo.
Dos mujeres que se encuentran en el aeropuerto parece que se conozcan de toda la vida.
Nostálgico y muy original, te hace reflexionar. Es un canto a la niñez y a la amistad.

🏡 La extraña.
Sharon regresa a su antigua casa, a rememorar donde pasó los mejores años de su vida.
Otro canto a la niñez y a lo que dejamos atrás según nos hacemos mayores.

☉ Sun City.
En este relato vuelve el olor a podredumbre y con el, esa sensación de inquietud.
Ya lo había leído en la colección de Gran Súper Terror Horror 3 de Stephen King y Ramsey Campbell entre otros hace bastante, pero aún así reviví esa sensación de malestar que me dejó entonces.
Es de esos relatos que perduran en ti durante una buena temporada.
"Descarta la antigua piel, descarta la antigua vida, como yo he hecho, y renace."

⏺El Nido.
Dos hermanas, Sylvia y Pam, se mudan a una casa a reformar tras la muerte de su madre.
Pronto su relación se verá enturbiada tras encontrar algo en el desván.

Casi todos los relatos me han dejado con la sensación de querer saber más del destino de los protagonistas y como habría podido seguir la historia.
Queda muy patente la capacidad de Tuttle de hacerte estremecer con lo más cotidiano y dejarte completamente noqueada en la últimas líneas.
Una antología imprescindible que todo amante del terror más cercano, nada de fantasmas y vampiros no, el terror real que vivimos cada día en nuestra propia piel, no se debería perder.

¿Lo único malo? La cantidad de erratas que me he encontrado tipo "sentió" en lugar de "sintió", pero que no han logrado empañar la lectura, aunque molestan la he podido disfrutar igual.

¿A qué esperas para leerla? 🙄📖

📚
https://www.facebook.com/LaLocadelosL... 📚
Profile Image for Gafas y Ojeras.
335 reviews369 followers
August 10, 2021
Un nido de pesadillas parece un lugar lleno de peligros. El hogar perfecto en donde se originan todos aquellos males que nos atormentarán a la hora de irnos a la cama. Lisa Tuttle consigue en esta recopilación de relatos anidar en nuestra cabeza muchos de esos fantasmas que atormentan a los lectores pero, sobre todo, es capaz de reflejarlos partiendo de realidades que son mucho más aterradoras que cualquiera de las criaturas que pueblan cada una de estas pequeñas narraciones.
Y es que cuando uno trata de encontrar un nexo que una las trece historias que contemplan este Nido de pesadillas tiene claro que la fragilidad de sus protagonistas y la pérdida de control de los que las rodea merece toda la atención. Una fragilidad muy alejada del concepto de debilidad, que lleva a los personajes que pueblan las narraciones a enfrentarse a sí mismas más que a los peligros que las rodean. Eso convierte estos relatos en auténticos dramas cotidianos con los que uno empatiza con facilidad, acercándonos a las historias desde esa cercanía que nos proporciona el haber experimentado en nuestras vidas el peso de la ruptura, del desapego, de la incomprensión, el abandono, la incertidumbre…todas las fracturas emocionales que nos envuelve en el torbellino de miedos que arrastra cualquier fracaso sentimental.
Lisa Tuttle te lleva a esos pasadizos para después dejarte solo y aislado ante la oscuridad que tienes delante. Porque una vez te sientas desprotegido, sin nada ni nadie en donde poder apoyarte, cuando aparezca frente a ti los fantasmas que tanto temías a la hora de irte a la cama, es cuando el terror triunfa sobre la cordura.
Trece relatos que te paralizan por dentro en donde navegan criaturas paganas, terroríficas deidades celtas, sangrientos profetas, laberintos irreales y toda serie de extraños seres sobrenaturales que se asocian a los auténticos terrores que paralizan al más valiente, su propia imaginación.
Muchos de esos relatos son crueles y te despedazan por dentro. Es algo que siempre he admirado en los grandes autores de terror, su capacidad para el desconcierto, para dejarte sin palabras ante lo que acabas de leer. Y es que Tuttle no quiere que el lector disfrute de sus historias sino que las sienta y hará lo que considere necesario para que apartes la mirada del libro en más de una ocasión.
Este nido de pesadillas está lleno de esas historias y merece ser aplaudido por conseguir plasmar en palabras lo que otros autores esconden entre litros de sangre. El auténtico terror anida en nuestra mente y espera agazapado a que bajes la guardia para estremecerte.
Profile Image for Cody | CodysBookshelf.
785 reviews314 followers
October 4, 2019
A vintage horror story collection of the highest order, Lisa Tuttle’s Nest of Nightmares (1986) will soon see a widespread republication thanks to Valancourt Books, and if any old-school horror release deserves a bigger readership it’s this one. I paid an ungodly amount for my first edition paperback; it was worth every dollar.

I’ve been a fan of Tuttle’s since reading Lost Futures last year. That book was certainly more psychological, metaphorical, and fantastical than full-on horror. I’d say this collection is “traditional” horror with psychological bents in a few stories.

What’s amazing to me is Tuttle’s subtlety. She writes about anxiety and fear and loss in the lives of the women who populate her stories without ever delving into unnecessary gratuity or gore. Her tales convey an edge, a menace, without ever going above a whisper. Sometimes that type of short story works best for this reader.

It is hard for me to pick favorites in this collection, though I think “Need” is sticking with me most at the moment — what a gut-punch. Other favorites include “Flying to Byzantine”, “A Friend in Need” and “The Nest”.

Highly recommended for fans of ‘80s horror, or fans of the short story format. Lisa Tuttle is a name all horror fans should know!

Read for ‘short story collection’ in Halloween Bingo.
Profile Image for Alex (The Bookubus).
443 reviews532 followers
August 25, 2019
This collection of thirteen short stories includes lots of interesting themes such as hopelessness, loneliness, isolation, existentialism, belonging, wish fulfilment. Most of the stories are female focused and relate to being a women, and involve relationships, motherhood, and family.

My favourites were:
Bug House - a great, creepy opening story about a woman who visits her aunt and finds the house and her aunt are not in great shape.
Community Property - a couple going through a divorce have to decide who gets to keep the dog that they both love.
Flying to Byzantium - a science-fiction author is invited to attend a convention to talk about her novel. She has spent years trying to escape her home town and the person she was and now that starts to unravel as she regresses from the new life she has struggled to create for herself.
The Other Mother - a mother of two young children is trying to get back into her art after years of putting it n the back burner. She sees a ghost which inspires her to start a new painting.
Sun City - a woman works a night shift at a hotel. She starts to have nightmares about a really disturbing incident that occurred some years ago.
The Nest - two sisters buy a house together and find something strange in the attic.

Overall it's an excellent collection of bleak and unsettling stories. I definitely recommend checking it out!
Profile Image for Oscar.
2,204 reviews567 followers
September 9, 2015
En ‘Nido de pesadillas’ (A Nest of Nightmares, 1986), la estadounidense Lisa Tuttle nos ofrece un terror cercano, fruto de la acumulación de sensaciones, en el que prima el componente humano. Sus protagonistas son mujeres y sus argumentos son cotidianos: matrimonios con problemas, relaciones entre madres e hijos, entre hermanos; en definitiva, un terror reconocible para el lector. Y de repente, en este entorno cotidiano, se introduce lo sobrenatural y terrorífico. Cabe destacar la habilidad de Tuttle para golpearnos en el último párrafo de cada relato, y a veces incluso en la última línea.

Estos son los trece relatos incluidos en la antología ‘Nido de pesadillas’:

Nido de bichos. (****) Una mujer, tras la ruptura con su marido, se traslada a la casa de su tía, una casa que está muy deteriorada e infestada de bichos.

Hamburguesa de carne de muñeca. (*****) Una niña se da cuenta de que sus muñecas van desapareciendo.

Bienes compartidos. (*****) Un matrimonio que se está divorciando, reparte sus bienes, pero no saben qué hacer con su perro.

Volando a Bizancio. (**) Una escritora de ciencia ficción asiste a una convención en Bizancio, Texas, su estado natal. Al rememorar su adolescencia, todo empezará a venirse abajo.

Recorriendo el laberinto. (***) Una pareja de viaje por Inglaterra, observa a unas misteriosas personas que recorren un laberinto en medio del campo.

El señor de los caballos. (*****) Un matrimonio vive en el campo con el hijo del marido y sus cuatro sobrinos adoptados. La mujer se enterará de la terrible maldición que acompaña al establo.

La otra madre. (**) Una mujer, que vive con sus dos hijos junto a un lago, observa una extraña figura.

Necesidad. (****) Una joven universitaria, alejada de su familia y prometido, conoce a un chico en el cementerio local.

La memoria de la madera. (****) Un matrimonio adquiere un antiguo arcón a muy buen precio. Sin embargo, al abrirlo despide un olor nauseabundo que desaparece al momento.

Cuando te necesita un amigo. (**) Dos mujeres que se encuentran en un aeropuerto, mantienen una conversación durante la cuál parece que tienen más en común de lo que creen.

La extraña. (*) La protagonista regresa a la antigua casa en la que vivió de joven.

Sun City. (*****) Una mujer que vive en El Paso, empieza a sentir y a ver una extraña figura, a la que acompaña un olor a podredumbre.

El nido. (****) Tras la muerte de su madre, dos hermanas adquieren una casa en Inglaterra, a la que hay que hacerle reformas. Pero algo que observa una de ellas, junto al agujero del tejado, empezará a enturbiar su relación.

En resumen, una magnífica antología, bien escrita (o traducida), y con variedad de temas, que retrotrae al mejor terror de los 80.
Profile Image for Graeme Dunlop.
340 reviews3 followers
May 25, 2015
What an appropriate title for this collection of short stories! Every story is, indeed, the stuff of nightmares. Most are in decidedly normal and ordinary settings which begin to skew toward the inexplicable and insane.

I think the best word to associate with this book is "unease". All the stories left me feeling edgy and unquiet. The first story, in particular, left me feeling almost unclean.

You might be left with the impression I didn't like this book but, in fact, I did. It's difficult to do this kind of horror well, the kind that sticks in your mind and stalks your imagination afterwards. And these stories do that very well indeed.
Profile Image for Chris DiLeo.
Author 16 books65 followers
January 1, 2021
The Valancourt Line of reissued "Paperbacks from Hell" is such a glorious treat for horror fans. It is particularly wonderful for those of us who have fond memories of 1980s horror—the garish covers, the over-the-top taglines, the pulpy madness of monsters and violence and gore.

For Christmas, my wife gifted me the entire 13-book line of "Paperbacks from Hell," and I chose to start with Lisa Tuttle's shorty story collection, A NEST OF NIGHTMARES. How could I resist that somehow squirm-inducing cover of two newborn birds that look more like aliens than anything so commonplace as animals?

This collection of tales is well known among certain circles of horror fans. Amid the profusion of horror paperbacks published in the 1980s of which most were substandard fare, there are a handful of standouts that should have risen to the highest levels of popularity and recognition. (That assumes an inherent fairness to the fickle nature of the arts.) This collection is one of those books.

These stories are dread-filled and unsettling. They resonate long after each is finished. They are rooted, as all my favorite horror stories are, in the everyday commonplace doings of life. There is more than enough anxiety, fear, horror, and even monsters in our day-to-day lives to compete with anything offered in fantasy worlds.

These stories are all from the woman's perspective, of which I am also fond as it seems to me that the female psyche is more fertile ground than the male's for the very elements that comprise the best horror—love, grief, hope, loss, identity, and the need for human connection.

Tuttle's stories continually amazed me because of where she takes each tale. It got so I would pause midway through each and ask myself what I thought was going to happen, and nearly every time Tuttle surprised me with where she went.

These are marvelously crafted tales, both in structure and wording. Tuttle does not waste any time, but nor does she sacrifice depth of characterization and emotion. Perhaps one could find issue with her frequent use of characters waking in the night to unknown horrors, but Tuttle uses this common motif as more than a mood-setter. The women wake in the night because they are ever-harried by anxiety and worry and so they do not sleep well, and yet the waking world offers more horror than the dream one.

(As a side note to writers: Tuttle is a master of transitioning from scene to scene, and at narrative summary, always keeping her tales moving briskly along toward darker and darker corners. She is also, needless to say, a master of the well chosen detail.)

A few highlights from the collection:

"Bug House": a tribute to gothic horror tales with decrepit old homes, dying matriarchs, and mysterious strangers. The ending is a doozy—shocking and genuinely unnerving.

"Community Property": a sick joke for sick people—like me.

"Flying to Byzantium": all aspiring authors should read this tale of one author's trip to a genre convention. It's particularly spot-on with its pervasive hopelessness.

"The Horse Lord": Another great ending—and yet another reason to fear children.

"The Other Mother": I thought I had this one figured out and, yes, I guessed the ending, but Tuttle gets there in a terribly awful way only a mother could truly appreciate.

"The Memory of Wood": a by-the-book Tales From the Crypt-type of story that works perfectly. Sometimes it's not about predictability, it's about inevitability.

"A Stranger in the House": Another solid ending.

"Sun City": A great inverting of typical tropes—the horror not of night but of day (and madness, too, of course).

"The Nest": This is a masterwork of fiction. Another tale of a dilapidated old house in the countryside and two adult sisters who try to make a life there, but something in the attic is threatening to destroy any chance at happiness. This tale could easily have gone into an over-the-top finale but instead offers desperation, pleading, and disquiet.

Get the book. Read it. Your nightmares will be far richer.


Profile Image for Mariana.
422 reviews1,877 followers
November 7, 2023
Un librazo, de las mejores antologías de relatos que he leído. Tuttle captura los horrores femeninos con una sutileza como pocos otros autores. En este libro van a encontrar el miedo a maternar, pero tambièn el sìndrome del impostor, el duelo, la violencia y un gran etc.

Por favor lean "Recorriendo el laberinto", "El dios caballo", "La otra madre" y "La memoria de la madera", puros relatos que se van a quedar conmigo. Gracias Valancourt books por reeditar a Lisa Tuttle después de que esta antología sólo se conseguía en UK.

Mi nueva misión en la vida es leer todo lo que escriba esta señora.
Profile Image for Cliff's Dark Gems.
169 reviews
January 26, 2024
This was unfortunately a mixed bag. I am disappointed because I had high expectations based on the reputation of this vintage horror collection.
The horror is mostly subtle and psychological, exploring themes of loneliness, isolation and guilt- almost exclusively from a female perspective. The author has a very distinct, original voice and the premise behind each and every story was interesting and engaging.
My problem with that in almost all the stories, the ending was a huge let down. I want short story endings to shock me, kick me in the guts and blow me away. I want the story to linger after I've finished reading them. These were, for the most part, totally forgettable in my opinion.
Some exceptions and standouts were Bug House, The Other Mother, Sun City and Need.
Profile Image for Alex.
Author 3 books29 followers
March 3, 2020
“Lisa Tuttle’s specialty is domestic terror, frequently with a feminist slant, focusing on families breaking up, women under pressure, and the insidious intrusion of supernatural evil into an already fractured normality.” Stephen Jones and Kim Newman encouraged me to read this with their “Horror: 100 Best Books” essay collection. I’m glad they did.

Tuttle has a scholarly awareness of the recurring themes in the many styles of horror, and knows just where to apply torque. THE OTHER MOTHER revisits ghost stories and NEED revisits THE MONKEY’S PAW. THE HORSE LORD is awesomely horrid, and reminds me pleasantly of Reamy’s BEYOND THE CLEFT. Yet Tuttle deftly manages to avoid the danger of being derivative, and gives the themes new dread.

THE BUG HOUSE is a gut punch of an opener. It explores loneliness and its effect on the decay of romantic and familial relationships, as well as the consequences of aging into different eras of your life. Providing both the view of the elderly mother and the daughter provide a lens to focus those themes in a tight space. Then combine this with the haunted house and you’ve got a really chilling tale. This one has some serious sticking power and I’ll come back peer in the windows again. THE MEMORY OF WOOD the perfect study of the haunted object, and is delivered in a fashion that can stalk us from our own living room (much like SHELF-LIFE collected elsewhere).

This collection and Tuttle’s stories are worth the effort to track down. She is a master of the craft.

UPDATE: I love that Valancourt re-released this book, and I loved a number of the stories even more in paper than I did on the previous read digitally.
Profile Image for Sheila.
1,122 reviews112 followers
September 21, 2021
4 stars--I really liked it. I wish I'd found Lisa Tuttle earlier. This collection of horror stories--almost all featuring women, and mostly set in the 70s/80s (pre-cell phone!)--was chilling. They range from truly nasty horror to dark fantasy, and there wasn't one I disliked. Very brief story ratings below.

Bug House: 4 stars. Really dark body horror.
Dollburger: 3 stars. Yeah, dolls are scary.
Community Property: 3 stars. Dark.
Flying to Byzantium: 4 stars. A woman falls (is dragged?) back into her past and can't escape.
Treading the Maze: 5 stars. This kind of British folklore is right up my alley.
The Horse Lord: 5 stars. As is this piece of Americana folklore!
The Other Mother: 3 stars. Worries about the constrictions of motherhood.
Need: 3 stars. About loneliness.
The Memory of Wood: 4 stars. Super dark, yikes.
A Friend in Need: 3 stars. Somber and dark fantasy.
Stranger in the House: 3 stars. Another story of being trapped in your past.
Sun City: 3 stars. The past catches up.
The Nest: 3 stars. Another trapped woman. (A strong theme!)
Profile Image for Jesus Flores.
2,523 reviews59 followers
May 17, 2022
Nest of nightmares

Colección de cuentos entre de terror y perturbadores. Ma llamo mucho la atención que el que más me gusto fue el único que no era terror/weird.

Los que más me gustaron:
A friend in need, este es el que más me gusto, reconfortante, tierno.
Dollburguer, de los de terror el mejor, esto si es material para pesadillas
Flying to Byzantium, este me dio una vibras bien creepy, y más con el contraste al principio.
The other mother, super cruel
The horse lord, este si me dio ñañaras

3.8 stars
Profile Image for Estibaliz.
2,459 reviews71 followers
June 21, 2017
Sé que me repito más que el ajo, pero cada vez que puntúo una recopilación de relatos dejo claro que no es mi formato narrativo de preferencia, para que la nota se pueda valorar en perspectiva.

Sirva la aclaración inicial para afirmar la alta calidad de estas breves historias, tanto en lo que respecta a estilo como a originalidad de las ideas que inspiran cada una de ellas y, sobre todo, a su capacidad para hacer eso que a estas alturas ya resulta tan difícil, en una sociedad en la que está todo visto y de nada nos espantamos: asustar o, cuanto menos, estremecer... que no soy yo especialmente miedosa.

Como suele suceder en recopilaciones de este tipo, no todas llegan al lector de la misma manera, pero parece cosa cierta que todo el mundo encontrará aquí algo que le toque, para bien... o para mal, tratándose de género de terror. Un terror que combina elementos fantásticos, pero que recurre también al estremecimiento que nace de asomarse a las intimidades de la naturaleza humana.

Mis dos relatos favoritos son un buen ejemplo de ambas vertientes (aunque hay más): "La Memoria de la Madera" apela a lo sobrenatural, mientras que "Bienes Compartidos" es pura humanidad... pero los dos han dejado huella. Escalofrío.
Profile Image for Iblena.
391 reviews31 followers
June 1, 2022
Debo confesar que auque me gusta el terror, tengo muy pocos referentes: Una cuántos novelas de terror psicológico e historias de fantasmas japonesas, algún que otro cuento de Robert Bloch y Lovecraf, la antología de relatos de Edgar Allan, dos volúmenes de las crónicas vampíricas de Anne Rice y por supuesto las novelas y antologías de Stephen King.

Por eso siempre estoy en busca de nuevos autores y libros, que ajustándose a mis gustos pueda incorporar a mi escueto currículum de aficionada al terror y en este sentido Lisa Tuttle con su antología de relatos titulada Nido de Pesadillas ha sido un descubrimiento extraordinario.

En nido de pesadillas están presentes todos los tópicos clásicos del género de terror: Objetos malditos, amigos imaginarios, espectros, moustruos, maldiciones, universos o realidades alternativas, dioses y deidades ancestrales entre otros. Pero Lisa Tuttle, los introduce con múltiples giros en tramas tan completas y perfectamente hilvanadas, que el resultado final es de una total originalidad.

La antología incluye 13 relatos protagonizados por una gran variedad de personajes femeninos:
*La artista frustrada agobiada por las responsabilidades de la maternidad.
*Mujeres abandonadas por sus parejas o que atraviesan por tortuosos divorcios o crisis matrimoniales.
*La antigua chica friki de la escuela que regresa a su pueblo natal ahora convertida en la mujer que siempre deseó ser.
*Jóvenes esposas que soportan la incomprensión de sus maridos o que asumen la crianza de hijos que no les pertenecen.
*Viudas inconsolables que intentan lidear con el duelo por la muerte de sus esposos.
Incluso hay historias protagonizadas por niñas, dónde se manifiestan las ancieades que experimentan, ya sean fruto de los temores propios de la infancia o ligados a episodios de maltrato y violencia.
Las circunstancias y situaciones a las que hacen frente los personajes, impregnan cada historia de sentimientos tales como incertidumbre, frustración, impotencia, culpa, abandono, nostalgia, angustia, pérdida, odio y miedo.

Dos puntos a destacar de este libro:
*La capacidad de la autora de crear atmósferas inquietantes y perturbadoras: La casona rural que se levanta solitaria en medio de un lobrobrego campo, escenario del Dios de los caballos. O la casa en estado de abandono y decadencia de Nido de bichos (por cierto, este relato tiene muchos puntos en común con Una edad difícil de la rusa Anna Starobinets).
*La sutileza y ambigüedad de los relatos: Me encantan los finales abiertos y disfruto muchísimo con ese tipo de horror que insinúa más de lo que muestra. Y la propuesta de este libro, se basa en esa clase de terror y Tuttle parece manejarlo a la perfección. Esta antologia contiene historias con doble lectura que pueden pasar mucho tiempo en tu cabeza, siendo múltiples las interpretaciones que pueden desprenderse de ellas o simplementes asumes que lo narrado no es real, sino producto de un mecanismo de defensa del protagonista para suavizar el impacto de algo más terrible y que no tiene nada que ver con lo sobrenatural. Pero hacer esto último seria muy aburrido.

Relatos a destacar:
*Hamburguesa de carne de muñeca: Un inocente ardid para lograr que una niña sea más ordenada con sus juguetes, se transforma sin querer en una de las más aterradoras pesadillas infantiles. Me encanta como la autora logra captar la angustia de la pequeña Karen, la indefensión e impotencia de la niña al abrazar a su muñeca sin brazos ni piernas resulta profundamente conmovedora.
*Vuelo a Bizancio: Una escritora de ciencia ficción es invitada a una convención en un apartado pueblo de Texas, cuando vuelve a experimentar los miedos e inseguridades que la atormentaron durante su adolescencia, comprende demasiado tarde que ha sido una equivocacion aceptar la invitación. Un claustrofobico relato de terror psicológico con matices surrealistas, centrado en temas como la superación personal, la autopercepción y la autoestima.
*La otra madre: Sara una mujer divorciada en plena crisis creativa, se debate entre el amor y la devoción que siente por sus hijos y sus aspiraciones de realizarse profesionalmente como artista. Mientras cuestiona su rol como madre y su bloqueo artístico persiste, la figura fantasmal de una mujer empieza a obsecionarla y asechar a sus hijos. Este relato presenta uno de los finales más intensos y espectaculares de toda la antología.
*La memoria de la madera: Una pareja adquiere en una venta de garaje un arcón antiguo, el cual al abrirlo desprende un carateristo hedor que se desvace instantes después. Este exquisito objeto decorativo despertará la curiocidad infantil del pequeño hijo de la pareja y llenará de angustia a su madre. El temor más común de todas las madres se hace presente en este relato: El no poder proteger siempre a los hijos de los peligro que les rodean. La autora recurre a una figura infantil como vehículo para generar terror. Uno de los relatos con el mayor suspenso y sutilmente oscuro.
*Cuando una amigo te necesita: Cecely y Jane coinciden en el aeropuerto y entre ellas surge una familiaridad poco usual, Cecely cree reconocer en Jane a una antigua amiga de la infancia, que solo ella parece recordar. Nostálgico relato sobre los lazos de amistad que se tejen durante la infancia y del poder imaginativo de una niña para evadirse de una realidad hostil que la amenaza y lastima. Una historia más cercana al género fantastico que al terror, pero sin duda muy hermosa.
*La extraña: Sharon, tiene una personalidad autodestructiva y atraviesa por una crisis matrimonial que seguramente acabará en divorcio. Ya que está en la ciudad decide visitar el antiguo hogar de su infancia, el único lugar en el que ha sido feliz. Una trama que se desarrolla entre flashbacks y muchas sutilezas. Un ejemplo de como los recuerdos y experiencias de la infancia, se convierten en un refugio seguro al que recurrir cuando la realidad nos agobia, pero con un enfoque terrorífico.
*Nido: Dos hermanas con personalidades diametralmente diferentes, luego de la muerte de su madre deciden comprar una casa destartalada en la campiña inglesa y convertirlo en su hogar tal y como lo soñaron en su niñez. El comportamiento errático de una de ellas despertará las sospechas de la otra. Una historia cargada de simbolismos y ambiguedades, dónde también juega un papel importante la pérdida desesperada de un ser muy querido. Una muestra de las aveces complicadas y enfermizas relaciones fraternales, que oscilan entre el control, la manipulación y el chantaje.

Una antología que todo aficionado al horror no puede pasar por alto, sobre todo si se disfruta del terror más clásico. Vale la pena leer.
Profile Image for Scott Rhee.
2,257 reviews145 followers
November 2, 2022
Subtle, unassuming. These are two words to accurately sum up the short stories in Lisa Tuttle’s 1986 story collection, “A Nest of Nightmares”. Also accurate words: disturbing, horrific, unsettling.

It’s no surprise that this book, never before published in the U.S., is considered a collector’s item among horror enthusiasts. Over the years, this little book of nightmares has garnered quite a cult following. Thanks to Grady Hendrix, Will Errickson, and Valancourt Books, this book has been reprinted in the “Paperbacks From Hell” series.

Starting off with “Bug House”, a creepy tale about a woman visiting an elderly aunt who meets an unexpected —and unwelcome—-handyman who wields an almost supernatural power over both women, the book proceeds to a child who tries to protect her dolls from people who inexplicably want to eat them, in “Dollburger”. The third story, “Community Property”, is a slow burn commentary about abortion and euthanasia, with one of the most unsettling conclusions I have ever read in a short story.

“Flying to Byzantium” is probably every writer’s nightmare: a woman is invited as guest speaker at a sci-fi convention by her fans, only to have her self-worth and identity slowly stolen from her. I have a feeling that this is, perhaps, the most personal of Tuttle’s stories.

“The Other Mother”—-my favorite in the book—-is as close to cosmic horror as Tuttle gets, without being blatantly Lovecraftian. It’s about a divorced mother who is slowly losing her grasp on her young children to a mysterious group of entities intimated to be ancient pagan gods.

Each of these stories deals with relatable human situations that evoke a universal sense of sadness, loneliness, and displacement in society. The supernatural aspects of the stories are only somewhat integral. Tuttle’s gift is her understanding of what truly scares us: namely, reality and the day to day banal unknowns that lurk around every corner.
Profile Image for Sub_zero.
709 reviews310 followers
June 27, 2016
La literatura que nace y se nutre del miedo es un fino arte por el que Lisa Tuttle demuestra pasear con sobrada desenvoltura. Aunque la gran mayoría de sus historias se desarrolla en entornos aparentemente inofensivos o poco amenazantes, siempre surge a medio camino una leve ruptura de esa cómoda y cotidiana tranquilidad que acaba degenerando en un estallido de locura. Lisa Tuttle no es de las que señalan con luces de neón el lugar donde anidan los pájaros y las pesadillas: no le interesa que apartes la vista, que te tapes los ojos o te encojas de miedo en un rincón. No, ella opta por tenderte su brazo a través de un camino mucho más subrepticio, plagado de tensión y suspense hasta la última línea, donde luego te suelta de un empujón. Nido de pesadillas reúne trece relatos que sacan a relucir espectros, psicofonías, extrañas posesiones, leyendas macabras e incluso terroríficas deidades de espíritu vengativo. Trece sugerentes invitaciones a explorar el lado más angustioso y turbador de la realidad, narradas con una absoluta despreocupación por los artificios y los lugares comunes. Sin duda, mi valoración general de la colección es positiva, si bien la presencia de algunos relatos poco definidos y la insistente convencionalidad de elementos como el estilo, los temas o la estructura narrativa de muchos otros me impiden verla como una obra sobresaliente; aunque sirve, eso sí, para conocer nuevas y refrescantes perspectivas del género más allá de las que nos ofrecen los títulos que se publican habitualmente en nuestro país.
Profile Image for Irene Well Worth A Read.
1,029 reviews112 followers
November 23, 2021
First off Happy Thanksgiving to those in the USA
This is likely to be my only review this week due to the baking frenzy I'm currently in. My reading time has been drastically reduced at the moment.

I love that Valancourt Books is re-releasing all these great horror classics from the 70s and 80s. I have been on a mission to read the ones I have missed the first time around. If you also missed out or were too young back in the heyday of horror I strongly recommend checking out all that is available from Valancourt.
A Nest of Nightmares contains 13 short stories originally published in 1986. They feel surprisingly timeless other than one person's desperate need to make a phone call which made that particular story feel dated, though anyone who survived the years without a cell phone will still understand what it was like to not have constant and instant access to make a call.
The stories are quite dark and more than one tale focuses on the dissolution of a relationship, where the horror is perhaps the feeling of being left out, abandoned, forgotten and lost. There is the conventional creature feature type horror, and haunted objects and a weirdly current feeling in the tale of a woman looking forward to the fence she's heard they are building to keep people from getting into the country from Mexico. There were only a couple of stories that missed the mark with me. I would recommend this to all who enjoy short horror stories with unexpected endings.
Profile Image for Tom A..
128 reviews4 followers
July 8, 2020
Plague Review 18: A Nest of Nightmares by Lisa Tuttle

Lisa Tuttle is a writer with a career on two fronts: horror and science fiction/fantasy. I don't have an opinion on her science fiction writing (I don't have an affinity for the genre), but I can vouch for her skill in delivering brilliant horror tales. My first encounter with her work was the short story "Objects in Dreams may be Closer than they Appear" in the House of Fear anthology, and I can say that it is one of the few ghost stories to give me high fever. The story in question instantly grips with its premise, lulls you into a sense of security with the middle part before delivering a chilling ending.

That is why I was not surprised that most of her tales in her first (?) horror anthology follow this simple but effective methodology in creating horror tales. These stories (all with women protagonists) are slices-of-life / domestic dramas that are GRADUALLY transformed by a supernatural element into unsettling and tragic tapestries of horror.

And it doesn't take a lot for the supernatural evil (sometimes ambiguously supernatural) to make the protagonists suffer; stories like "The Other Mother" "Sun City" and "The Nest" feature characters emotionally fractured long before their encounter with the uncanny. This element of Tuttle's writing extends to the outlier stories (i. e. not horror) such as the sardonic "Community Property" and the tale of convention trip gone wrong. ("Flying to Byzantium")

But Tuttle doesn't just write excellent "grief horror" ("Treading the Maze") or creep-filled shockers with twist endings ("The Memory of Wood") she also provides tales of ancient spirits wreaking havoc on the modern world, particularly those who deny their existence. ("The Horse Lord" and "Sun City")

My enjoyment of this collection lies not only in Tuttle's handling of the horror elements or manipulation of tropes and ideas but also with her quaint and engaging writing style. There is little to no overwriting, and we get to know what we need in a handful of words. This writing style makes even her weakest story (the Ramsey Campbell-ish "Stranger in the House") a pleasant read.

What more can I say? There's a good reason why this collection is in Horror: The 100 Best Books: it's an outstanding collection from an author who knows the different ways to scare the reader and uses them all.
Profile Image for Joey Shapiro.
326 reviews5 followers
August 20, 2025
Lisa Tuttle is the heir to the Shirley Jackson legacy!! Every short story in this collection is horror-tinged but they're always first and foremost just Good stories about people in situations just slightly divergent from ordinary reality. One or two didn't land with me (the one where a woman goes back to her childhood home was a complete dud to me) but a few stories are all-timers-- A Friend In Need, the one that's the furthest from horror and is more like a very sad/wistful Twilight Zone episode, was the one that struck me the hardest. We need to bring back horror writers who know how to write Good Fiction! Open the schools! The writing schools!
Profile Image for Alvaro Zinos-Amaro.
Author 70 books63 followers
January 22, 2025
One of the most memorable short story collections I've read in years.

Tuttle is incredibly deft at the short form. Several of these strike me as perfect stories, absolute classics. Revelatory.
Profile Image for Kelsi - Slime and Slashers.
386 reviews255 followers
February 20, 2021
I discovered this book from reading Grady Hendrix's Paperbacks from Hell, and I'm glad I did because I really had a good time checking out A Nest of Nightmares, which I'd classify as a collection of "old school" horror stories!

It's so refreshing to find a collection which features a believable female main character or protagonist in nearly every story. That comes as no surprise, as I've read that author Lisa Tuttle was a feminist. I'd say the one exception was the story "Community Property" which seemed to be told more from the man's point-of-view, but it was still great. I saw what Tuttle had in store for the ending before I got there, but that did not lessen my enjoyment of that particular story at all.

Overall, I think the horror was written with subtlety and a kind of eerie eloquence. The writing was fantastic, specifically Tuttle's descriptions.

I think the two stories that contained the most "in your face" horror were "Bug House" and "Sun City." "Sun City," in particular, really had some delightfully gross imagery: "The gutted shell of some other human being flapped grotesquely against his own." and "The strange cloak ended in blackened tatters that hung over his hands and feet, and the hood had ragged holes torn for eyes and mouth..."

Some of the other stories were more subdued and touched on common fears and anxieties like the struggles of motherhood, abandonment, issues with self perception and self worth, as well as loss.

I think my favorites were "Treading the Maze" and "The Horse Lord." I also really loved "The Other Mother" where the main character grapples with how to find balance between parenting and her artwork, resulting in chilling and unforeseen consequences.

Strong collection of stories that I would recommend to any horror fan, especially to those who enjoy low-key, creepy horror. It doesn't contain over-the-top gore, if that's what you fancy, but it still shines.
Profile Image for Miquel Codony.
Author 12 books305 followers
April 21, 2015
Todo un descubrimiento. Nevsky saca una traducción al castellano, una antología a no dejar escapar.

Lo veo clásico y muy bien escrito. Muchas veces tiene moraleja, más o menos, pero sin molestar ni eclipsar la historia. A veces consigue dar muy mal rollo. Es un planteamiento del horror muy psicológico, doméstico.
Profile Image for Katrina.
627 reviews179 followers
January 19, 2023
These stories have messed me up in the best way 😂
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