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| Horror Discuss horror writers and their works |
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| | #31 (permalink) | |
| Waiting at the Crossroads Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,489
| Re: Horror auhors/books you recommend Quote:
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| | #33 (permalink) |
| Chocolate Monster Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 41
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend I've just finished reading "Bitten" by Kelley Armstrong. It's a story about a pack of werewolves set in modern day America. Quite a clever book in which the central character is the worlds only female werewolf. I liked the book and am looking out for the rest of the series (3, I think) She has her own website with loads of info. kelleyarmstrong.com |
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| | #35 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,377
| Re: Horror auhors/books you recommend Quote:
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| | #36 (permalink) |
| Tiamat's Servant Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Highland
Posts: 65
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend Wow Where do you start!! Brian Lumley - the Necroscope series!!! Stephen King - Older stuff...THE STAND...Talisman...THE SHINING... SHAUN HUTSON...for those with stronger constitution John Connolly - Brilliant detective serial killer/horror - EVERY DEAD THING, KILLING KIND, WHITE ROAD, BAD MEN Graham Masterton - Night Warriors Robert McCammon - Wolf's Hour & Swan Song The list goes on LOL |
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| | #37 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Australia
Posts: 5
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend As far as horror/terror writers go, my all time favourite has to be Mark Z. Danielewski. His debut novel, House of Leaves, is almost pragmatic in its depiction of the supernatural, and indeed the terrible creatures alluded to in the book are rarely, if ever, seen. (I haven't actually finished it yet. I'm about half way) It's not even a story in the conventional sense: it's an essay analysing a fictional documentary in which strange things happen in an unassuming house. The "main character's" experiences are only detailed in the footnotes and, in a way, he does become somewhat of a footnote himself in the context of the larger narrative. It's hard to adequately describe this book - it reads nothing like Barker or King or Gaiman - so I won't try. But if you haven't read it, pick up a copy. It's a bestseller for a reason, and that reason has nothing to do with a dedicated fanbase. |
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| | #38 (permalink) |
| Rahvin's Grammy Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 405
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend I'm glad for this thread, and would like to see it added to. I find good horror books hard to find in the stores, because they often don't have their own section. I'm glad to see someone recommending McCammon's Wolf Hour & Swan Song--I like those. I also liked Brian Lumley's stuff, particularly the first several books in the series. Another one I really liked is the short story entitled, "Cabal" by Clive Barker--the basis for the cheesy classic movie Nightbreed. |
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| | #39 (permalink) |
| The Cat Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Malaysia
Posts: 2,625
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend I'll second you on that Cloud. Horror just like SFF is only now coming into its own here and bookstores are slowly beginning to acknowledge its merit as a separate genre deserving it's own section. Have been a love of the horror tale for as long as I remember, probably due to having bad eyesight and being able to see much better in the dark than in the day and growing up In Penang where the ghostly is very much a part of life. Some of the books I've read and loved over the years are: Christopher Marlowe: The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus. William Shakespeare: The Tragedy of Macbeth Mattew Gregory Lewis: The Monk: A Romance Jane Austen: Northanger Abbey Mary Shelley: Frankenstein Charles Maturin: Melmoth the Wanderer Robert Louis Stevenson: The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde H Rider Haggard: She Robert W Chambers: The King in Yellow HG Wells: The Island of Dr. Moreau Bram Stoker: Dracula Henry James: The Turn of the Screw Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness Bram Stoker: The Jewel of Seven Stars M.R. James: Ghost Stories of an Antiquary EH Visiak: Medusa HP Lovecraft: The Outsider and Others Clark Ashton Smith: Out of Space and Time William Golding: Lord of the Flies Richard Matherson: I Am Legend Ray Bradbury: The October Country Robert Bloch: Psycho Shirley Jackson: The Haunting of Hill House Kingsley Amis: The Green Man John Gardner: Grendel Stephen King: Salems's Lot Stephen King: The Shining William Hjortsberg: Falling Angel David Morrell: The Totem Peter Straub: Ghost Story Richard Laymon: The Cellar Thomas Harris: Red Dragon Tim Powers: The Anubis Gates Robert Irwin: The Arabian Nightmare Iain Banks: The Wasp Factory Peter Ackroyd: Hawksmoor |
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| | #40 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,377
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend Well, for those interested in the classics of the genre, I'd suggest first reading HPL's little book Supernatural Horror in Literature, which is available in multiple editions, the best being the annotated version edited by S. T. Joshi, which supplies bibliographical information on most of the items mentioned, as well as giving tons of other information that may prove useful. Also, several of the small presses and pod publishers are now reviving a lot of the classics that haven't seen print in decades, sometimes in a century or more. Wildside Press is reprinting some of Bulwer-Lytton's work, for those interested (he can be a bit arid for modern tastes, so a word of caution), as well as several by Ainsworth. Frederick Marryat's The Phantom Ship is back in print, being one of the best handlings of the tale of the Flying Dutchman. And there's a volume collecting together all of John Buchan's supernatural short tales, which were scattered throughout all his story collections, simply titled Supernatural Tales (originally published as Best Supernatural Tales, the original edition is quite pricey on the collector's market). While most are currently out of print, there's some attempts to revive some of the ghostly tales of H. Russell Wakefield as well... in fact, if you've got the money, Ash-Tree Press has reprinted his They Return at Evening and Others Who Return (Old Man's Beard), if you can track them down... Chaosium has collected together all the best weird work of Arthur Machen into three volumes; these include not only his better known works, but some of the obscurer pieces, as well as the novels The Terror and The Three Impostors. Chambers' weird tales were edited for Chaosium by S. T. Joshi, in a book called The Yellow Sign and Other Stories (quite a large volume, holding both all the short stories and two or three novels). Joshi has also done three books on the subject of the weird tale: The Weird Tale (covering the works of Algernon Blackwood, Arthur Machen, Ambrose Bierce, M. R. James, Lord Dunsany, and HPL), The Modern Weird Tale (dealing with several more recent writers, such as Ramsey Campbell, Stephen King, T. E. D. Klein, Thomas Ligotti, etc.), and The Evolution of the Weird Tale, dealing with some of the often forgotten masters of the form, such as W. C. Morrow, Edward Lucas White, and (though he's well-remembered in the UK) Arthur Quiller-Couch. He has also edited several volumes of stories in the field, as well as spearheading the revival of some of the lesser-known classics, such as Walter de la Mare's The Return. And speaking of... Anything by Thomas Ligotti is likely to reward reading, as he is one of the most literate and nightmarishly evocative writers around. Don't expect blood-'n'-guts ... this is a man who deals in nightmares, the shifting of reality so that one forever after sees it anew.... F. Marion Crawford's Wandering Ghosts has now been reissued, with a previously missing story or two, as The Complete Wandering Ghosts. There's suppoed to be a forthcoming one or two volume set of White's best stories... anyone who hasn't read White should try "Lukundoo"... All of Kipling's best supernatural stories have been collected together in various editions, as have Doyle's and Stoker's.... And Matthew Phipps Shiel's weird fiction has been collected together as The House of Sounds (including his novel, The Purple Cloud). There are new volumes of Algernon Blackwood's best coming out, at least one has been issued: Ancient Sorceries and Other Weird Tales.... And there is an edition of the complete short stories of Ambrose Bierce put out by University of Nebraska's Bison press (this includes, of course, a section devoted strictly to his horror tales, as well as ones devoted to his fables and Civil War stories)... At any rate, these are some of the suggestions that come to mind right off... |
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| | #41 (permalink) |
| ebony heart Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Cookstown
Posts: 5
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend horra books that YOU MUST READ!!! Coraline Pet Cemitarry Carrie Fire starter Sweet Blood Poisen horra movies The Blair Witch Project The Shinning The Ring The Grudge many more............... |
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| | #42 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,377
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend There's a Ligotti I've not heard about before: Teatro Grottesco, which collects together "much of his work published since Noctuary". The original edition is out of print already, but there's a trade edition forthcoming from Mythos Books, apparently. Definitely something to keep an eye out for.... |
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| | #44 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,377
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend Ah, thank you... Not been able to lay my hands on that one... extremely pricey over here, I'm afraid (the lowest I've seen on the paperback is about $65.00).... But thanks for the information. |
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| | #45 (permalink) |
| Here, but not all there. Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 240
| Re: Horror authors/books you recommend This is a mix of horror, vampire, and supernatural books. Anyways, I enjoyed reading them. The Books of Blood volumes by Clive Barker Fledgling by Octavia E. Butler The Sonja Blue series by Nancy A. Collins (first book is Sunglasses after Dark) The Vampire Files series by P.N. Elrod (first book is Bloodlist) Anita Blake series by Laurell K. Hamilton (first book is Guilty Pleasures) Southern Vampire Mysteries series by Charlaine Harris (first book is Dead until Dark) The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson The Dunwich Horror and Others by H.P. Lovecraft (or any of his other story and novella collections) I am Legend by Richard Matheson Vampire Chronicles series by Anne Rice (first book is Interview with a Vampire) Mayfair Witches series by Anne Rice (first book is The Witching Hour) Ghost Story by Peter Straub |
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