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Richard Laymon
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Jason
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Nov 10, 2008 05:02PM

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Melvin is the most inept villain I've ever read.



I would love it!



Swan's Life, boy that was many years ago.Thank You

My first was also "In the Dark", and I loved it. I also really enjoyed the Beast House books, and "Night in the Lonesome October."



It's good you didn't finish that Laymon novel, because it made no sense at all in the end.

"
It was a great book. I forget how I heard about it.


I answered this on the other thread. I'll add though there's a fourth part called
Friday Night in Beast House it's Novella length but I haven't read it, It generally gets pretty bad reviews though.
I remember reading a long time ago that the first Laymon you read will be your favourite and I think that's pretty much true. The Cellar, imo, is one of his best. The sequels are worth reading; I found the second book dull but it really delivers toward the end and I really liked the third part.

The Traveling Vampire Show
The Stake
These, I would have given 4.5 stars if I could have, not quite worthy of a full 5 stars:
One Rainy Night
The Woods are Dark (the Leisure edition)
I also read:
Midnight's Lair
Dark Mountain
The Cellar
The Beast House
Darkness, Tell Us
Endless Night
Among the Missing
Triage
My least favorite to date:
Come Out Tonight
My first was Endless Night and I will never forget it!



They are classic, no? Both are very horrifying without the gore. I do like gore, but to scare without it, always good! Both are also vampire tales, but not really... if you've read them, you understand what I mean.

Yes, Endless Night was very violent, but I liked it because it got such a strong reaction from me. I like it when a book can do that. And I'll never forget those psychotic young men, the horrible things they did!
One Rainy Night was awesome. It played out like a movie in my head. The good ones usually do. If I can't visualize it, I can't get into it.


it's called Quake
I like Laymon & will be reading more of his stuff but I have noticed, just in the few I have read.. The men & boys are usually a bunch of Horny Toads.

I just read a book by another horror author and I have come to realize that these men don't know how to write women at all. They create their perfect woman (the woman in the book I just read is a supermodel nymphomaniac working on a Ph.D. in sex...stop laughing) which rings false for a lot of readers. Instead of scary the book was comical.

I just read a book by another horror author and I have come to realize that these men don't know how to write women at all. ..."
Read Barkers female characters then... he's gay so it's not like your going to get the typical guy female character.


Tressa wrote: "Oh, God. Here we go again. :) At least it isn't me saying it this time.
I just read a book by another horror author and I have come to realize that these men don't know how to write women at all. ..."
Try "Rosemary's Baby" by Ira Levin... Someone else I know read it & thought it was a woman writing it. The man does tap into the female in that particular book...
Stephen King's "Carrie" comes pretty close
I just read a book by another horror author and I have come to realize that these men don't know how to write women at all. ..."
Try "Rosemary's Baby" by Ira Levin... Someone else I know read it & thought it was a woman writing it. The man does tap into the female in that particular book...
Stephen King's "Carrie" comes pretty close

Books mentioned in this topic
In the Dark (other topics)After Midnight (other topics)
Out Are the Lights (other topics)
Der Ripper: Roman (other topics)
Island (other topics)
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