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Tiny Timbs posted:Edit: nm I mixed up Tomorrow and Tomorrow with Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow when I searched lol one is a track from Final Fantasy 14, and one is a sililoquy from Shakespeare lmao
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# ? Jul 17, 2023 14:59 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 04:19 |
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For King you can grab literally anything between the 70s and 90s and it's probably good. If you want to ease in a bit get one of the short story collections, Night Shift or Skeleton Crew ideally
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# ? Jul 17, 2023 15:11 |
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I think Night Shift has The Langoliers, which is probably one of my favorite short stories by King. It's too damned good.
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# ? Jul 17, 2023 16:12 |
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Vargatron posted:I think Night Shift has The Langoliers, which is probably one of my favorite short stories by King. It's too damned good. Nope, Four Past Midnight has that one. Which is too bad because Langoliers is rad, but the other three are not the best.
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# ? Jul 17, 2023 16:14 |
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I loved the Langoliers, in spite of its flaws, but couldn't finish any of the other three in Four Past Midnight. I tried each one and DNF'ed each of them.
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# ? Jul 17, 2023 17:11 |
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Sun Dog is fine but generic, same with Secret Window (plus you can see the twist coming a mile away), but Library Policeman is easily one of his worst.
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# ? Jul 17, 2023 17:19 |
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Opopanax posted:Library Policeman is easily one of his worst. i'm a poleeeth mannn over almost any other scene or line from any King piece. probably because it's so fuckin' doofy
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# ? Jul 17, 2023 18:55 |
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Shrecknet posted:i dunno, i'll always remember Oh, I didn't say it wasn't memorable. Child rape usually is
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# ? Jul 17, 2023 19:29 |
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Rereading It at the moment and the part with Beverly and her husband at the beginning is loving hard to read. I felt anxious even though I knew what was gonna happen in the end.
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# ? Jul 17, 2023 19:48 |
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I just finished My Heart is a Chainsaw and all I can say is what the fuuuuuuuuuck. I loved some parts (the climax), hated others (the laggy middle) and went back and forth on others (our horror thesaurus, very teenage, very traumatized protagonist). Jones is just throwing everything at the wall in this, so many themes of family and generational trauma and different horror influences (all annotated) and a whole lot of it drags in endless buildup but when he gets a full head of steam and the end you just get overwhelmed by his talents as a writer. I had to set it down a few times it was getting so intense. Still a lot of unanswered questions, and I guess I have to pick up the second in the trilogy but I don't know if my poor anxiety can handle that right now. Also finished Between Two Fires. Nice little monster quest, even if it tangled its ending a bit, good rec and still quite unique as everyone was saying.
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# ? Jul 18, 2023 06:12 |
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Camp Damascus, Chuck Tingle's legit horror book, is out today, buckaroos
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# ? Jul 18, 2023 14:28 |
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Opopanax posted:Camp Damascus, Chuck Tingle's legit horror book, is out today, buckaroos
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# ? Jul 18, 2023 16:03 |
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Opopanax posted:Camp Damascus, Chuck Tingle's legit horror book, is out today, buckaroos Order button pounded in the butt by curious goon
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# ? Jul 18, 2023 16:06 |
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Good Citizen posted:Order button pounded in the butt by curious goon same, same
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# ? Jul 18, 2023 16:41 |
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Opopanax posted:Camp Damascus, Chuck Tingle's legit horror book, is out today, buckaroos How buttsexish is it?
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# ? Jul 19, 2023 09:58 |
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Iirc it’s set at a conversion camp sooo
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# ? Jul 19, 2023 21:46 |
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finished The Gone World last night, the ending felt a little rushed and the characters constantly confused at obvious things are my only gripes (it made for some tedious dialogue). Really like the imagery of the Vardogger though and a really fun read.
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# ? Jul 20, 2023 20:21 |
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My weekend has been planned.
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# ? Jul 20, 2023 23:04 |
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King has since said that The Tommyknockers was not a good book, that it was the last book he wrote before he cleaned up his act, and that his writing generally suffered during his period of substance abuse. So, exactly when was this period because it came out in ‘87, the same year he put out Misery, a year after he wrote It, and three after he wrote Pet Semetary. Or at least published them, I guess, was he just turning in old manuscripts?
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# ? Jul 21, 2023 04:02 |
meat nonsense, beef pork goat nonsense
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# ? Jul 21, 2023 07:26 |
Who knows about king, wasn't it cujo he was so hosed up he didn't remember writing it at all?
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# ? Jul 21, 2023 07:50 |
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zoux posted:King has since said that The Tommyknockers was not a good book, that it was the last book he wrote before he cleaned up his act, and that his writing generally suffered during his period of substance abuse. So, exactly when was this period because it came out in ‘87, the same year he put out Misery, a year after he wrote It, and three after he wrote Pet Semetary. Or at least published them, I guess, was he just turning in old manuscripts? Pet Sematary was written in 1979. It only got published at all because King missed a contractual deadline due to It taking four years to write and him having to provide them with something. That's around the time he began switching from booze to pills - you can tell because the detail on prescription meds increases.
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# ? Jul 21, 2023 09:08 |
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Jedit posted:Pet Sematary was written in 1979. It only got published at all because King missed a contractual deadline due to It taking four years to write and him having to provide them with something. That's around the time he began switching from booze to pills - you can tell because the detail on prescription meds increases. Percodans, Quaaludes, Vicodins... he loves to name drop those in his 80s books.
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# ? Jul 21, 2023 12:17 |
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Vargatron posted:Percodans, Quaaludes, Vicodins... he loves to name drop those in his 80s books. He wasn't just dropping the names, is why.
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# ? Jul 21, 2023 12:26 |
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Recently re-read The Stand and was kinda amazed at how often he just threw the n-word around even with characters who probably wouldn't use that word. Some definitely would. Reminded me when Tarantino would go wild with it. Like in True Romance. I'm not a prude at all but it seemed so forced. Was gonna go back and re read other King like TommyKnockers and Salem's Lot. Anything I need to be ready for? I spent 3 days in ISS for It so I already know about it.
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# ? Jul 21, 2023 23:30 |
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HouseOfLeaves99 posted:Recently re-read The Stand and was kinda amazed at how often he just threw the n-word around even with characters who probably wouldn't use that word. Some definitely would. Reminded me when Tarantino would go wild with it. Like in True Romance. I'm not a prude at all but it seemed so forced. Was gonna go back and re read other King like TommyKnockers and Salem's Lot. Anything I need to be ready for? I spent 3 days in ISS for It so I already know about it. Tommyknockers only has one bit that's kind of sus with regard to race. The other stuff is typical King fare. I don't think you're being a prude or anything. Some things haven't aged well comparatively and it's fine to call that out. While I don't excuse it necessarily, I just bear in mind that those questionable elements were a product of the times. Overall I don't ascribe malice to any of King's portrayals. I think he's just trying to tell a story with the characters. But it's not always handled well, especially with the way that he writes women in some novels.
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# ? Jul 22, 2023 00:14 |
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Opopanax posted:For King you can grab literally anything between the 70s and 90s and it's probably good. If you want to ease in a bit get one of the short story collections, Night Shift or Skeleton Crew ideally I love most of King's stuff but when it comes to stuff from the 90s I'd avoid Desperation and The Regulators. They were ok but I didn't find 'em worth the effort really. The only truly bad books of his I've read are the last three Dark Tower ones. I loving loved the first books in the series so it was a huge letdown when he released these; felt like he was just rushing to get them done at this point. Also, if you dig older King then Joe Hill is worth checking out. NOS4A2 feels like late 70s King.
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# ? Jul 23, 2023 20:47 |
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HouseOfLeaves99 posted:Recently re-read The Stand and was kinda amazed at how often he just threw the n-word around even with characters who probably wouldn't use that word. Some definitely would. Reminded me when Tarantino would go wild with it. Like in True Romance. I'm not a prude at all but it seemed so forced. Was gonna go back and re read other King like TommyKnockers and Salem's Lot. Anything I need to be ready for? I spent 3 days in ISS for It so I already know about it. Stephen got a pass I don’t know under what circumstances but it is clear he got one
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# ? Jul 23, 2023 21:27 |
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Clayton Bigsby posted:
He explicitly was. He already knew that if he didn't crack on he'd never finish it, but then his accident crystallised it in his mind.
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# ? Jul 24, 2023 12:10 |
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We'll I just finished Tell Me I'm Worthless and need to recover for a few days. What an absolutely brutal novel that somehow still hums. Rumfitt's treatment feels so contemporary, unlike so much horror, channeling TERFS and British neo-fascism into a cry to keep fighting despite the overwhelming odds. Having a haunted house repeat the Rivers of Blood speech and having a Stewart Lee epigraph are just icing on the cake. Don't know how you'd read it with a personal closeness to those issues. Even at my cis Canadian distance it required a lot of putting down.
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# ? Jul 25, 2023 03:44 |
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It’s so good. The ‘sick house syndrome’ imagery applied to a Britain where everything is damp and angry and slowly falling apart was spot on.
GhastlyBizness fucked around with this message at 19:04 on Jul 25, 2023 |
# ? Jul 25, 2023 10:54 |
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I've been reading this novel called Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield and it was billed to me as kind of a romance/horror style book. The premise is that a person's wife comes back from a deep sea expedition that had some sort of accident and is changed. It's told in an alternating viewpoint between the two characters and some of the passages are really creepy body horror type stuff. It's not as explicit as some horror works in terms of descriptions, but it's got a very creepy vibe that I'm really liking.
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# ? Jul 25, 2023 14:20 |
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Vargatron posted:I've been reading this novel called Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield and it was billed to me as kind of a romance/horror style book. The premise is that a person's wife comes back from a deep sea expedition that had some sort of accident and is changed. It's told in an alternating viewpoint between the two characters and some of the passages are really creepy body horror type stuff. It's not as explicit as some horror works in terms of descriptions, but it's got a very creepy vibe that I'm really liking. I thought it was an OK read but the entire time it felt like it was missing something and it ended up feeling a bit sluggish and disappointing. But it was odd enough to be interesting.
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# ? Jul 27, 2023 09:48 |
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anyone read Tremblay's new collection? I was terribly underwhelmed by Growing Things, but I am hoping this one will be an improvement over that
Help a goon out! Lots of books - horror, nonfiction, classics and more for sale.
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# ? Jul 30, 2023 23:29 |
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Finished up Ballingrud’s The Strange this morning. Thread is right, definitely more horror-adjacent than straight horror, tho there’s definitely some cosmic horror-esque implications towards the end that make my brain wrinkle. But otherwise a beautiful, sad, incredibly written little book. Cannot recommend it enough. Just don’t go in expecting normal horror Ballingrud, but if you love the quality of his prose and writing and the breadth of his imagination I cannot see how this would disappoint at all.
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# ? Jul 31, 2023 14:01 |
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Clayton Bigsby posted:I thought it was an OK read but the entire time it felt like it was missing something and it ended up feeling a bit sluggish and disappointing. But it was odd enough to be interesting. The parts on the submarine felt undercooked and weirdly reticent to go visceral with it. Not an awful book overall, but one that very much felt like one of the better Caitlin Kiernan stories about moody lesbians in a fraught relationship (and also spooky stuff) with the edges sanded down.
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# ? Aug 2, 2023 09:38 |
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never really popped in this thread before but in the past month I read The Magnolia by Andrew F. Sullivan (dystopian near-future with goop monsters), Tell Me I'm Worthless by Alison Rumfitt (haunted house by way of antifascist polemic), and Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke by Eric LaRocca (three creepy novellas/short stories that get better as they go), all new horror from the past two years, all good to great.
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# ? Aug 4, 2023 15:56 |
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I wasn’t really interested in any of those before but those are compelling descriptions, might pick em up now
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# ? Aug 4, 2023 18:18 |
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I DNFed Black and Endless Sky by Matthews Lyons because it was mediocre at best and went off the rails. I should've DNFed it after my first instinct 200 pages before but oh well. I'm really starting to appreciate a good novella, or short novel, I gotta say.
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# ? Aug 5, 2023 01:03 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 04:19 |
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I'm two-thirds through Negative Space by BR Yeager, and it's... something. I'm not even sure in liking it but I cannot stop reading it. It is extremely weird, surreal, and heartbreaking. Just a bunch of hosed-up kids experiencing an awful, awful time. Ironically enough now that I'm an old I feel bad for the parents, trying to understand something beyond their comprehension, committing generational sins without really realizing it. Super intense CW: suicide, like a lot of it I feel a combination of dread and excitement while pushing toward the end. Are all of Yeagers books like this? Also for those who have read, is Lu trans? the author plays pretty fast and loose with the pronouns and while it's the vibe I'm getting, I didn't want to make assumptions with all the other weird poo poo going down.
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# ? Aug 6, 2023 18:57 |