Literary Horror discussion
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Monthly Reads
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October 2014 Monthly Read
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I'm personally thinkin' Manly Wade Wellman. Silver John?
I’ve always thought that Silver John was just too much of a good guy to make for an interesting character. This isn’t an insurmountable problem for the short stories featuring John (because the focus is more on plot), but becomes one (for me at least) in the novels.

or possibly
Long After Midnight: 22 Hauntings & Celebrations (there's a story called "The October Game" but I don't know how much of it is Halloweenish.)

I always thought the Silver John stories were always a bit tongue in cheek.
I honestly didn’t get that sense when I read these stories, even those as outlandish as “The Desrick on Yandro”, but of course it wouldn’t be the first time that such nuance went completely over my head. And I did read most of these stories a long, long time ago.

I'm not sure if this has anything seasonal about it, but has everyone read Laird Barron's The Croning already?
Perhaps I should be embarrassed to admit this, but I have not.

Scott, what have you read that turned you of?

Hi, Char. I finished The Croning last week. I wasn't that impressed; 3 stars at most.



I'm glad we have some honest reviewers. Sometimes I think people inflate their reviews just because an author is currently hot or seems to be in such high regard by others.
Exactly. I'd much rather hear an honestly expressed viewpoint even if it's at odds with mine.

I think that happens sometimes too. I think that we often want to like something...especially when we've been told how great it is by people that we trust. If that makes any sense. :)
Yes, I have sometimes recognized that tendency in myself -- especially in my younger days.


Scott, what have you read that turned you of?"
I read The Imago Sequence and Other Stories. I don't remember a thing about it, but I think all of it just left me cold. He seems like one of those writers who writes weird for the sake of being weird, without any meaning or point to it.
But I guess you could say the same of Ligotti, whom I like very much. *shrug*

I did find an audiobook of The Halloween Tree here (U.S.): http://www.amazon.com/The-Halloween-T...
Then I found a much less pricey version here (this version is dramatized):
http://www.amazon.com/The-Halloween-T...

But I love Ligotti. I think he is a much better writer than Barron.
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Books mentioned in this topic
The Imago Sequence (other topics)The Halloween Tree (other topics)
Teatro Grottesco (other topics)
The Croning (other topics)
The Halloween Tree (other topics)
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Here are some more suggestions:
At Fear's Altar by Richard Gavin. Richard Gavin is like a Dark god to me. At Fear's Altar has a goodreads rating over 4, has one Halloween story, and a superb novella which is autumnal.
Burnt Black Suns by Simon Stantzas. Published this year, available both in paperback and electronically. Average goodreads rating over 4 stars. Likely will be nominated for awards.
Shadows and Tall Trees, Issue 6. Came in second place in the previous poll. Average goodreads rating over 4 stars.
The Wine Dark Sea by Robert Aickman. Average goodreads rating over 4 stars. Just as good, if not better, than the book the group is currently reading.
The Children of Old Leech: A Tribute to the Carnivorous Cosmos of Laird Barron, edited by Ross Lockhart and Justin Steele. Average goodreads rating over 4 stars, likely will be nominated for awards.
Don't Look Now: Selected Stories of Daphne Du Maurier. Contains the stories "The Birds" and "Don't Look Now", also some other interesting stories, and my favorite novella of all time, Monte Verita. Average goodreads rating over 4 stars.
The Dreams of Cardinal Vittorini by Reggie Oliver. Just as good as the other two books this group read. Contains the story "The Seventeenth Sister" which I consider a classic in the genre. Average goodreads rating over 4 stars.