Classic Horror Lovers discussion
Introductions/Group Housekeeping
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Introducing...

Greg
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show...


1.Quentin Wallace
2.I like the weird short story guys, Lovecraft, Derleth, Aickman, Blackwood, any in that vein.
3.To me modern horror tends to rely more on gore and shock than atmosphere, but I do like both.
4. I am a horror author, somewhere between Classic Horror and Modern Horror I'd say, so please check out my author page if interested!

2. I love it all - Machen, Poe, Lovecraft, La Fanu, Stoker, Maturin, James, Blackwood, Radcliffe, Lewis...
3. I've been fascinated with ghosts, vampires, werewolves etc since I was a kid. I grew up on ghostbusters and goosebumps. This was a natural progression. I read all kinds of books but nothing pleases me more than a scary tale from the 18th or 19th century.
4. I'd like to discuss some cool tales and get good recommendations for the lesser known books of this genre.

At the risk of seeming rude, would you by any chance be Alex Scully of Firbolg?

2. Mary Shelley, H.P. Lovecraft
3. It's more creative, atmospheric, and well-written than the large majority of "horror fiction" peddled these days.
4. I am looking for a quality edition for Kindle of Lovecraft's complete works. The Delphi edition I bought this week was riddled with errors, and I returned it for a refund. Anybody own a Kindle edition you're happy with?

2. Poe,Lovecraft,Blackwood,Bierce, Matheson...(too many to list)
3. I think that it's genetic...I've always felt different because of my macabre interests...I'm an 11th cousin of Lizzie Borden and a 5th cousin of Elizabeth I (I have a natural attraction/repulsion to sharp objects) or maybe it's because my mom smoked while she was pregnant (or that baseball bat upside my head at the age of four).
4. I'm a horror/weird fiction writer who favors the 'old school.' I've written and published short-stories, poetry and essays. I'm currently working on my first novel but I REALLY love short stories, and I'm also completing a second book of short stories, "Second Helpings: More Tales From The Cryptoteria." My first collection, 'Madame Marla's Lunchtime Tales of Terror," is scheduled for a giveaway that will begin this Saturday (3/21) along with a book of essays (A Dirty Girl's Essays on George Carlin's "7 Words You Can't Say on Television") based on George Carlin's "Seven Words You Can't Say on Television."

And don't worry about that baseball bat thing...I'm sure it had only positive results.

1. Therese
2. Bram Stoker, Mary Shelley, Edgar Allan Poe, Algernon Blackwood, Manly Wade Wellman, C.L. Moore, M.R. James, H.P. Lovecraft are some favorites. For more modern horror, Robert Bloch, Robert Aickman and Clive Barker.
3. I was drawn to it as a young reader and never lost that love, as well as devouring science fiction and fantasy tales. I love the descriptive style, the lovely vocabulary (if I see the word eldritch-I'm in!) and the subtle horror that creeps up on you.
4. Interested in going back to reread some favorites and get recommendations.

Hey...Eli
H.P. Lovecraft would be the writer of choice as far as favorites. Life doesn't leave a lot of time for reading and television is ridiculous! Always been the creative type despite the before mentioned life...recently wrote a book. Didn't read any other books, did little research, didn't want to 'pollute' the inspiration with other people's ideas. Now...I'm looking to expand the horizon beyond a fascination with old horror movies. I welcome the groups suggestions that do NOT include vampires, werewolves, scratch-built re-animated people, or anything remotely 'King-ish'...that guy...sets me off, s'don't!
H.P. Lovecraft would be the writer of choice as far as favorites. Life doesn't leave a lot of time for reading and television is ridiculous! Always been the creative type despite the before mentioned life...recently wrote a book. Didn't read any other books, did little research, didn't want to 'pollute' the inspiration with other people's ideas. Now...I'm looking to expand the horizon beyond a fascination with old horror movies. I welcome the groups suggestions that do NOT include vampires, werewolves, scratch-built re-animated people, or anything remotely 'King-ish'...that guy...sets me off, s'don't!

2. Among my favorite classic horror writers - Poe, Lovecraft, Bram Stoker, Mary Shelley, Algernon Blackwood, Charles Beaumont, Harlan Ellison - first that come to mind tonight.
3. I grew up reading (from kidhood) Poe (one of very few authors I re-read), and Mary Shelley from kidhood, along with Agatha Christie (I know, different genre). Charles Beaumont and Harlan Ellison originally from TV, then shorts in old magazines. The atmosphere, often subtle yet vivid, draws me into the story itself, as opposed to the individual 'flinch' moments of splatter and slasher horror.
4. I look forward to reading and discussing the work of classic horror writers, both from the past and current times; both familiar favorites and those whose work I've yet to explore.

I hope that everyone is feeling well, hopefully my stories will make your stomachs churn and scare you from the mere turn of a page.
My name is Ian Carroll and I am a horror author as well as a rock & metal music author too.
I have 13 books now on Amazon and my author page is under my name.
My latest book is an old style scary adventure/horror and is my favourite so far!!
I love Hammer Films and old stories!


My name is Justin.
Some of my favorite classic horror authors are Bram Stoker and Edgar Allan Poe.
I enjoy classic horror because I feel it's greatly under appreciated, the origins and older horror is just so different compared to today and it's these people and these stories that have helped pave the way for those of us who write horror today.
I also run "Hundred Year Old Horror" a blog in which I talk about and analyze classic works and authors from hundreds of years ago. I either talk about the impact an author or book still has today from centuries past or I analyze it in my own way by seeing how classic authors rate here on Goodreads.
You can check out Hundred year Old Horror on Horror Afficionados and Pinterest @
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
https://www.pinterest.com/justinbienv...
Mike (the Paladin) wrote: "Uhhh...Eli, I've seen this post elsewhere. Might want to stick to the promotion threads. I'm not a Mod or anything it's just a suggestion."
Thanks!
Thanks!
Justin wrote: "Hello everyone!
My name is Justin.
Some of my favorite classic horror authors are Bram Stoker and Edgar Allan Poe.
I enjoy classic horror because I feel it's greatly under appreciated, the origins ..."
Welcome, Justin. I'll check out your sites.
My name is Justin.
Some of my favorite classic horror authors are Bram Stoker and Edgar Allan Poe.
I enjoy classic horror because I feel it's greatly under appreciated, the origins ..."
Welcome, Justin. I'll check out your sites.
1. Dormouse
2. Edgar Allan Poe is my biggest favorite. I also love The Monk by Lewis, Melmoth the Wanderer by Maturin, John Polidori and Bram Stoker. My latest acquaintance is M.R. James.
3. I think it is because of the style and atmosphere, and the fact that I'm a huge fan of history, especially the 19th century and the romantic and realistic perspectives of the era.
4. I am a book blogger from Finland. I read many of my books in English and purchase them from the Internet, because they are not available in Finnish language or in my local bookstores. For example, we got the Finnish translation of The Monk only last fall... I'm afraid classic horror (or horror in the first place) is not very popular here among readers or book bloggers, in fact I sometimes feel I'm the only person in the whole country reading these novels :) I'm very interested in meeting people from around the world who share my taste in books.
2. Edgar Allan Poe is my biggest favorite. I also love The Monk by Lewis, Melmoth the Wanderer by Maturin, John Polidori and Bram Stoker. My latest acquaintance is M.R. James.
3. I think it is because of the style and atmosphere, and the fact that I'm a huge fan of history, especially the 19th century and the romantic and realistic perspectives of the era.
4. I am a book blogger from Finland. I read many of my books in English and purchase them from the Internet, because they are not available in Finnish language or in my local bookstores. For example, we got the Finnish translation of The Monk only last fall... I'm afraid classic horror (or horror in the first place) is not very popular here among readers or book bloggers, in fact I sometimes feel I'm the only person in the whole country reading these novels :) I'm very interested in meeting people from around the world who share my taste in books.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Demon Hunters (other topics)The Night Side (other topics)
Sleep No More: Twenty Masterpieces of Horror for the Connoisseur (other topics)
Who Knocks? Twenty Masterpieces of the Spectral for the Connoisseur (other topics)
The Keep (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
August Derleth (other topics)H.P. Lovecraft (other topics)
August Derleth (other topics)
Algernon Blackwood (other topics)
Rudyard Kipling (other topics)
More...
2. Who are your favorite classic horror writers? Lovecraft (of course, William Hope Hodgson, Edgar Allan Poe
3. Why do you like classic horror? Because it's more macabre, and more cerebral and intelligent. Modern day horror is just too crude (for the most part).
4. Anything else you'd like us to know about you? I got my love of Lovecraft from my Mom. She discovered him in middle school (in the 1950s!)