You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
Group Themed Reads: Discussions
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October 2015 - Reporting Thread


Not alone at all Cherie. In the group read I took part in, all of us loved it and either gave it 4 or 5 stars. I guess it's not everyone's cup of tea.

Audiofile Magazine has a section lets you sample narrators and read reviews. I wish I had checked it first and chosen the Blackstone Audio version. Their audiobooks are always good.

Audiofile Magazine has a section lets you sample narrators and read reviews. I wish I had checked it first and chosen the Blacks..."
Yes, the narrators can really get under your skin sometimes, if their voice or cadence does not match the tone of the book. I have a harder time with the women than I do the men, but I still have to listen to the sample to decide if I want to do the audio version. If I don't like them, I read instead of listen. Like I said in the thread, I had three samples to choose from for SWTWC.
Maybe your star rating or book experience would have been better if you had read it instead of listening to it, Joan.

If I have time I'd like to read Something Wicked This Way Comes.




Did the writing feel dated or old-fashioned? I read this as a teen and remember enjoying it, but I'm wondering if it's one of those books that doesn't hold up once you're an adult. That it's better to leave it alone, unread under a cover of nostalgia.


I seem to be wallowing in spooky books this month. I read Something Wicked This Way Comes and participated in the group discussion thread. I enjoyed the book very much. I think I gave it four stars, but I thought seriously about giving it five. I loved the very descriptive prose--shades slithering, doors gasping open or booming, keys rattled their bones in locks. There were times when it seemed almost a little too much like purple prose, but for the most part it really worked. The book originally came out in 1962, and looking at things that came after, I feel sure this book was a major influence on later works.
After finishing "Something Wicked," I moved on to Dracula. I'm still reading it--I think I have about 100 pages to go. I first read Dracula when I was in high school, and I did not like it very much. I actually found a lot of it boring. Looking at it now, I am impressed with the craftsmanship of the writing. The author uses multiple voices and points of view to tell the story, and does that very skillfully. By today's standards, the story moves at a leisurely pace, but it was written in a much more leisurely time.
Taking a break from Dracula, I wanted to read something more engaging over the weekend, so I turned to reading "a book with a beautiful cover" for the cryptogram challenge. The book I selected was Murder on the Cliffs Murder on the Cliffs (Daphne du Maurier Mysteries, #1) by Joanna Challis. It featured a young Daphne Du Maurier as the "amateur sleuth" in a mystery set in Cornwall at a large, beautiful but creepy house. Elements of Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier are scattered through the book as supposed inspiration for the future author. The book has much to recommend it, including the atmosphere and the allusions to Rebecca. I only gave it three stars in the end, though, because the longer I thought about the book, the more "loose ends" I identified.


Casceil,
In high school I thought Dracula was a scary book about vampires; the smoldering/repressed female sensuality went right over my head.


You are right - the creepy without violent was good but the moralizing set it firmly in teen-lit circa 1960.


Thanks, I'll give it a reread after I read the first book in the series- which I've never read.

I read Pines. I was a bit bothered that was not much development to the characters, what little there was did not make me like any one of them, especially Ethan.
But the storyline was good and moved along nicely. It was not so much intense as it was a fluid read of scenarios that seemed impossible, and very weird until the very end when everything comes together and makes perfect sense.
The thing I loved the most is that just as I was ready to say enough is enough, stop with the running and near escapes of death, the author delivered the end that was nothing what I was expecting.
I will definitely read the last 2 books and watch the mini series when I finish them.
But the storyline was good and moved along nicely. It was not so much intense as it was a fluid read of scenarios that seemed impossible, and very weird until the very end when everything comes together and makes perfect sense.
The thing I loved the most is that just as I was ready to say enough is enough, stop with the running and near escapes of death, the author delivered the end that was nothing what I was expecting.
I will definitely read the last 2 books and watch the mini series when I finish them.

@Kelly - the ending blew me away too - I didn't see it coming. Will you be continuing with the series?

@Kelly - the ending blew me away too - I didn't see it coming. Will you be continuing with the series?"
I think the problem with trying to juxtapose a modern, realistic setting and the fantastical is doing it well enough to make the reader believe/accept. And the author, by using film transcripts and other things like that, was trying to take a short cut to making the unreal real instead of complementing it. I can't help but compare it to Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, except that Gaiman managed to combine the real and supernatural worlds successfully. This book fell short of Gaiman's, which of course, most authors would. But this book was very, very, very short of Gaiman's mark.


I am currently reading Dandelion Wine. It is a completely different story and feel to SWTWC. It is much more nostalgic. Lots of pretty passages but not quite the same style of SW. There are a few dark spots, but on the whole, I like it very much. I am almost at the end. I have been listening and reading along. I did not like the narrator very much at first, but he got better. It is from Tantor books and the narrator is Steven (or Stephen) Hoy.

I finished reading The Passage by Justin Cronin and discussion can be found here https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Sarah - I do plan to read the rest of the series, I have a few I want to finish first.

Let me just tempt you a bit. You think you know the answers at the end of book 1. You don't. Get out book 2 and 3, and be surprised. *evil laughter*

I'm going to be reading book 3 asap as a series kill for my current level.


I discussed the book a little in the buddy read thread, and I expect to discuss it more now that the toppler is over and I can read the spoilers.


I found the writing to be interesting and very lyrical. At least to me it seemed as though each sentence was followed by a contrasting sentence comparing the two boys. It reminded me of the old days when we were required to write comparison and contrast paragraphs in school. I will confess that I kept thinking "it was the best of times, it was the worst of times" as I read.
The book was OK and a quick read but I remember liking some of Bradbury's other works better. I didn't realize it is part of a series. However, and this may come as a surprise, I'm not chomping at the bit to read the rest of the series. It will just have to remain a lonely little series orphan on my list.

I am still reading Something Wicked This Way Comes
I am half way through it and really like it so far.




Sounds creepy - last summer in England on an old railway walking path my 6-year-old grandson and I found an abandonned train platform. He got quite scared and insisted he could hear voices on the platform even though we were alone in the woods.




Joan that just gave me chills up and down my spine! In the book, it's the property owner's children who first became aware of the ghosts. Not sure whether to recommend this too you or not, based on your grandson's experience.

Ooh! Where was that Joan? I want to go... There are quite a few abandoned tube stations in London dating back to the war and everything is still in place - posters etc. They're often used in films. There are a number of disused railways about, one in fact near me and the old waiting room on the platform has been converted in to a tea room.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Pagan Stone (other topics)Heirs of Grace (other topics)
Dracula (other topics)
A Head Full Of Knives (other topics)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Ray Bradbury (other topics)Jonathan Aycliffe (other topics)
Amanda Grange (other topics)
Justin Cronin (other topics)
Neil Gaiman (other topics)
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