Cover Image: The Cursed Earth

The Cursed Earth

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Member Reviews

I enjoyed this book, there is a clever mix of satire and overzealous energy that makes it an enjoyable read. I’ll definitely be on the lookout for more books by this author

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Thank you to the author and NetGalley for this ARC.

This was a very different book. It was definitely creepy. I give it ⭐⭐⭐.

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D.T. Neal knows folk horror well. He knows how small towns guard their secrets. Like tightly sealed oysters concealing pearls, they must be pried open to expose the treasure within. So too is it with The Cursed Earth, maybe his best work to date. An absolute psychedelic mix of horror and thriller that pulls no punches and leaves no stone unturned in a cosmic and folk horror mashup.

Welcome to Lynchburg, Pennsylvania. Inside the rolling hills and dark forests is a town ruled by the mysterious La Signora Grigia. The novel starts off strong, setting the tone for what’s to come, depicting a rural setting where anything can happen. Gangsters, cults, an evil clown, and black magic collide with the power of mushrooms and an emotional core that keeps the pages turning.

At the 50th anniversary of the annual Fungus Festival, a veritable cornucopia of characters all bring their unique plotlines to intersect in Lynchburg. There are a lot of characters in this novel and it can sometimes feel a touch cramped. But Neal is a skilled enough storyteller that he is able to deftly balance a variety of different people and keep the story exciting.

The prose is smooth, with Neal getting into different heads and storylines with ease. Each character is well crafted and three-dimensional, whether they are rowdy young adults looking for fun or corporate spies out to steal fungi secrets for their masters.

The reader will be impressed by how much The Cursed Earth feels like an absolute, mushroom-induced trip. Neal paints vivid, sometimes bizarre pictures of the scenery, showcasing a land that is to be respected. Violating that is at the peril of the interlopers, and figuring out just what will happen to everyone involved is a joy.

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Cursed Earth
by D.T. Neal
Nosetouch Press
2022
**** ( 4 stars)

I loved this cosmic, psychedlic, folk horror Mushroom centric Manifesto, everything about this novel is mushroom related.
Set in Lynchburg Pennsylvania; a group of gangsters who have been extorting mushroom farmers attempting to hide from authority, partygoers, mushroom growers and fanatics, and an aspiring celebrity chef, all among those heading to the 50th Annual Fungus Festival, in a town ruled by the psychedelic Grey lady-La Signora Grigia. The festival quickly turns into a struggle for survival, and to identify who the Signora really is.
Sharp, witty, comedic and fun, this is well written and held my attention throughout the novel. The characters are relatable and well developed and its easy to feel for them. The way he incorporated mushrooms into everything is amazing. I'd definately read more by D.T. Neal
Thanks to Netgalley and Nosetouch Press for sending this ARC e-book for review.

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This is my first foray into folk horror and it has started me down a whole rabbit hole of what is now my favorite genre.
Interweaving multiple storylines that take place at an annual mushroom festival in rural Pennsylvania, this manages to be funny, moody, and creepy all at the same time.
A fun, if long, carnival ride that I will definitely take again in the future when I want the story equivalent of a lava lamp and some classic rock.

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I enjoyed this folk horror book a lot. This author was new to me. So glad I picked this one out. Creepy story. Funny in parts.

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It's a quite weird and entertaining story, an unusual horror that I enjoyed even if it's a bit slow during the first part.
There's cosmic and folk horror, ancient gods, a fungi festival, and some 70s vibes.
It's well written, the world building is fascinating, and I enjoyed it.
Recommended.
Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this ARC, all opinions are mine

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Well this didn’t draw me in at all. The story was all over the place, almost nonsensical. The blurb sounded good but the reality was far more boring I guess.

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The Cursed Earth by D.T. Neal made me regret not becoming a mycologist or at least a mushroom farmer.

The story follows a host of characters and their experiences at an acclaimed mushroom festival in a small town. There’s a group of rowdy 20 year olds interested in having fun and tripping. And there’s a group on a mission of corporate espionage in order to steal the secrets for their pharmaceutical/mushroom company.

There were a lot of characters but they weren’t hard to keep track of and it was easy to care about their well-being. I was invested and wanted to find out all of their secrets and the secrets of the weird, cultish founding family, The Templetons.

This book had everything; small town horror, cults, drugs, gangs, Magic mushrooms, witchcraft, freaky clown, human sacrifice and lots of blood and gore.

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The Cursed Earth by D. T. Neal releases October 4, 2022

This book is amazing. A folk horror with a cult, an evil clown, black magic, and lots of mushrooms!

D. T. Neal does know quite a bit about mushrooms and it shows in this story. Neal is fantastic with visualizing in words the atmosphere, the scenery, and the characters emotions and actions. Fans of Ronald Malfi will enjoy this book.

In a little town called Lynchburg in Pennsylvania, there is a huge mushroom business. This family owned business shares their success by hosting a yearly Fungus Festival. This year is the 50th anniversary of the festival; and it falls on Friday the 13th. This story follows the story of a chef, a group of college friends, a gang, industrial spies and lots of festival goers.

While it may seem that following so many views of the festival can be difficult to follow, Neal has the skills to make this easy to keep up. I never got confused as to who is who and what their role is in the story.

The narration between all the characters flowed easily and smoothly. I enjoyed the banter and learning about the different types of mushrooms.

The action scenes were also easy to follow. I found myself so engrossed and speed reading because I was so involved in what happens to each character. I came to care about what happens to all of the people in this story.

Overall, I found this book immersive, engaging, and fun. I would definitely put this book as one of the best books I have read in 2022.

Thank you #NetGalley and #NosetouchPress for sending me this ebook to read and review. #TheCursedEarth

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"The Earth as we know it, the ground upon which we stand, the thin crust of life upon it, is rooted in death and decay. Without decay, there would be no life. Without life, there would be no decay. They dance together, life and death, the blessing and the curse together, interchangeable, switching roles as the moment requires it."

What's it about: Shady events that happen during a mushroom festival in a small Pennsylvania town.

What I liked: The story is told from a few different perspectives during the festival which I liked since you get to follow along with the different experiences. I also liked the psychedelic, folk-y small town atmosphere of the novel. And of course the cover is really pretty.

What I didn't like: It's long (just under 500 pages) and a bit of a slow burn because of that. And as much as I liked the different perspectives, I also feel like there was a bit of overlap and there were a few chapters with character exchanges that were a little repetitive.

Would recommend if you like: mushrooms, festivals, supernatural stories, cosmic folk horror or cults.

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In a town where they celebrate the fungus festival and mushrooms are their biggest export and their national park is sacred of course they’re going to have guardians when outsiders tried to infiltrate and have no respect for the surrounding area this is when the gray ladies attack. The biggest baddest mafia isn’t even a match for the ladies this book is divided into four different stories all connected to the gray leaving this isn’t a very long book but it’s intelligently written and hora at its best. It’s not just murder for murder sake but those with no morals and they black heart will be taken out first. I really enjoyed this book and I highly recommend it if you love horror with morals you really need to read this book but if you don’t have ethics and morals be careful of the gray lady. I received this book from NetGalley and the publisher but I am leaving this review voluntarily please forgive any mistakes as I am blind and dictate my review.

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Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for giving me the opportunity to read an advanced readers copy of The Cursed Earth in exchange for an honest review.

Cults, magic mushrooms, goddesses— this whole book feels like a trippy ride on its own!

The story was fast-paced and exciting, but I personally think that the descriptive details took away from the excitement. Although I appreciate the effort put into describing the setting and characters in full detail, it somehow became quite repetitive and tiresome for me as a reader.

HOWEVER, I do believe that a huge part of having to enjoy The Cursed Earth one must be able to visually imagine the setting and the people, which got me thinking: what if it were a graphic novel/comic? I would absolutely love to see drawings of the Grove, La Signora, blue mushrooms, the annoying twins– honestly, everything! I also think the same artist who designed the cover, which was the first thing that caught my attention and made me pick up this book, should work on the drawings since they did such an amazing job at matching the theme of the whole story.

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This was not one of my favorites of the year.
I felt like it was a very slow burn, it also might have fallen flat for me because I live in Pittsburgh so all of the references took me out a good amount.
It is very well written but the jumping between characters doesn’t let me get to know anyone very well, too the point where I find myself not caring for the characters.
I definitely can see someone really enjoying this book, I am just not that person.

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This book was silly in the best way, fulfilling every promise made by its charming psychedelic cover.

Four groups converge on Lynchburg, Pennsylavania for the town's annual fungus fest; a quartet of slasher-film ready obnoxious college kids eager to sample exotic hallucinogens, an opportunistic restauranteur, a group of Pittsburgh gangsters with a truly half-baked scheme to shake down the town's industrial-scale mushroom farm, and a trio of corporate spies from a California pharmaceutical company.

The prose strikes a balance between breeziness and rich description - and the imagery on display once the hyphae start fruiting is striking and eerily beautiful. The town's touristy details and festival pageantry is so convincing and specific, it sent me digging around the internet, sure there must be a real Lynchburg, Black Cap, and Mushy.

The book loses one star for not being scary in the least. The practitioners of Lynchburg's homegrown religion are immediately and obviously bad news, and there's not a drop of real suspense about whether those who oppose them stand a chance. (I'd had some hopes for Lilli as a red rival to La Signora Grigia...) Tonally, it's much more an adventure-comedy with horror themes than a horror book, like a less raunchy Christopher Moore. It's a little shaggy as well, with character encounters and plot detours that could have either been punched up with more comedy or creepiness or else truncated (for example, the college kids' pub crawl.)

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4 solid stars
This was such a fun strange weird novel. I really enjoyed the multiple POV here, as it helped the story quite a bit. The characters were fun and well developed. It’s a bit of a slow burn, but I actually prefer that in this particular genre. The writing style was great and easy to follow.
I’ll certainly be getting this as a physical book for my personal library.

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This novel started with a bang, a hint at what was to come, and then took me in another direction before eventually coming full circle.
At just under 500 pages, I think it's fair to say it's a slow-burner, or the first half is at least. I live in rural Wales but have family in Pennsylvania and have attended a country festival there in the past while visiting, so that was the setting my mind depicted as I read.
The book is modern, and yet because of the folk and cult elements, there were times when it felt a bit 70s, a hippy kind of vibe that was bound to happen at a 'shroom' festival. This is not a criticism, in fact I enjoyed that aspect very much. The festival brought the town to life in a multi-sensory way, partly because of the culinary aspects that gave me flashbacks to the TV series, Hannibal.
There are lots of characters to get to know, and several POVs, so you get to see things from more than one perspective which adds depth.
My favourite scenes were those that included La Signora Grigia, the goddess who underpins everything that happens in this town. The imagery here felt original and terrifying.
During the final third, things did not turn out quite as I expected, as one of the main characters (who shall remain nameless since I don't want to give spoilers) comes under the Signora's spell.
I really enjoyed the way it all came together towards the end, and also the twists and turns along the way that had me guessing who really was in control and how much of the supposed cosmic elements were reality. I won't tell you, because that would spoil the fun.
My thanks go to the publisher for sending me an ARC of this novel.

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This was a really fantastic horror novel, I have an allergy to mushrooms so the thought of a mushroom horror novel is terrifying. D.T. Neal has a great writing style and I was invested in what was going on. The plot was what I was hoping for and enjoyed getting to know the characters. The characters felt like real people and it was a great way they handled the situation. I look forward to reading more from D.T. Neal.

"Emily didn’t know what to expect at the Sacred Grove. Part of her thought she should just stay in town, and let it blow over. Hopefully Jerry’s people would be able to develop the stolen samples into something profitable. That should have been enough for her, but it wasn’t. Emily wanted to know what they had in this grove, to learn more. “Melinda’s likely to be there,” Emily said. “I know she will be,” Ash said."

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