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What Else Are You Reading?
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Scott
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Oct 22, 2017 08:18PM

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I'm also reading The Mystery of Rio, which is an odd and rather shapeless book that reads like a cross between Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands and The Name of the Rose. What initially starts as a moderately straight-forward murder mystery morphs into a catalogue of historical crimes and then a sex comedy, all laced with some dark folk magic and witchcraft. It's far more interesting in concept than telling but it's not quite boring or artless enough to put down completely.

I'm going into this one with an open mind as I preferred Year's Best Weird Fiction, Volume Two edited by Kathe Koja the most of this series and I know many others were disappointed by that one. Which volume so far has been your favourite, Neutrino?

Good to hear this is out. I like Helen Marshall's writing, though I was not fond of Vol. 3. Will probably give this a shot.
I'm also reading Things We Lost in the Fire, which Marie-Therese and I would probably have proposed as a buddy read; but I felt guilty about distracting from the group read doorstop. A blast so far.
And Stephen Beachy's odd and enigmatic Glory Hole. (Geez, did you know how many books come up when you search for Glory Hole?) Lots of in-jokes about the San Francisco New Narrative scene, and the JT Leroy affair. Entertaining, but could be shorter.


After getting off to a slow start (found the first couple of stories antipathetic and set the book aside), I also gobbled up Gwendolyn Kiste's And Her Smile Will Untether the Universe. Not sure if the first few stories really are not to my taste (they seemed really mannered and as if they were trying too hard) or if it was just my mood at the time, but after getting through the third story, everything else was excellent and I found it hard to put the book down.
Kiste writes dark fantasy cum horror with a distinct literary bent. I could easily see her fairy tale-based work being featured in a Kate Bernheimer anthology or a Tin House collection. Her work is also strongly feminist and reading her stories brought back some of the feelings of recognition and rage I first felt reading Angela Carter decades ago. Many thanks to Bill Hsu for recommending this collection to me!

By the way, right now I'm reading Black Wings Has My Angel by Elliott Chaze which is not horror but it is literate.

"Conference with the Dead" has been excellent so far. He can be -remarkably- cruel towards his protagonists (stories like "The Toddler"). Shame that he seems to have disappeared from the face of the earth.

In the Shirley Jackson single-author collection shortlist, I think this and the Machado book are way ahead of the other nominees. (The only one of the five I wouldn't recommend is the Samantha Hunt.)

Good to hear! I have this collection and plan to start it after I finish our current buddy read, Looming Low Volume I.
I haven't read anything by Samantha Hunt but I think you've read both the story collection and her novel and didn't care for either. Any particular reasons or just poor writing?

Hmm, I just returned The Dark Dark to the library, so I can't give examples. (Nit-picking alert) I do remember details of the prose, here and there, that bothered me. I also thought some of the transitions were rocky, and not in a good way.


I'm at the end of that one, and then I picked up a copy of What the Hell Did I Just Read because I loved Wong as a Cracked author and read his other book.


It's NOT stupid...HE was a great storyteller, a great essayist, and (in my opinion) a great man. I am sure many of us feel the same as you.

It's not really a horror novel (at least not yet), more of a mystery with a possible supernatural aspect. I don't usually like his stories but this is good.

Your feelings are totally appropriate, Harlan Ellison was a fantastic writer. And your post is relevant to this group for I think some of his stories can be classified as horror. I read a werewolf story by him which is good. There isn't much good werewolf fiction.


(Yes, they messed up their own standard website format. Don't get me started.)
I'm way more in agreement with the 2017 judges than the ones for 2016. Schweblin for novella, Woods for novelette, Machado for single-author collection, all work on my 2017 favorites list.
Marie-Therese, didn't you mention checking out the Hye-young Pyun novel?
A reminder that our July Buddy Read is David Demchuk's Bone Mother, also a 2017 nominee. I'm really enjoying it so far.

I'm way more in agreement with the 2017 judges than the ones for 2016. Schweblin for novella, Woods for novelette, Machado for single-author collection, all work on my 2017 favorites list. ."
Great list of winners this year!
Bill wrote: "Marie-Therese, didn't you mention checking out the Hye-young Pyun novel?"
Yes, I did. Shall we schedule it for an upcoming buddy read?

Great! Let's plan that for our next buddy read, after 'The Bone Mother'.


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Hunt for the Skinwalker: Science Confronts the Unexplained at a Remote Ranch in Utah
Paradox 2 - Beyond Eternity
Trainspotting
Generally Speaking
The Indian Cookery Course


Ghost Story by Peter Straub"
I read this the year it was published in the late 1970s (while awaiting the next Stephen King work) and loved it. It was a major reason I became a horror fan in the first place. Straub takes his time to really set the scene and build the suspense here, yet because the narrative is always directly relevant to the story line, no rambles as in other Straub works, it reads like one of his shorter novels. I am pretty sure this was a NYT top ten bestseller the year it appeared.


Ghost Story by Peter Straub"
I read this the year it was published in the late 1970s (while awaiting the..."
Thanks Dan. I'm about 20% done and enjoying it so far. The prologue got my attention but then things slowed down for a bit. They are picking back up though.


Ancient Sorceries and Other Weird Stories by Algernon Blackwood
Rating: 3 stars
Review: /review/show...

Boy's Life by Robert R. McCammon
Rating: 4 stars
Review: /review/show...

The Night of the Hunter by Davis Grubb
Rating: 4 stars
Review: /review/show...

A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny
Rating: 4 stars
Review: /review/show...

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I started this morning and, four stories in now, am really enjoying this volume. Holmes describes her work as "literary strange" and that seems fitting. These stories are dark and slightly fantastic but also very rooted in the real world, in settings that feel almost claustrophobically mundane. The end result is generally not something "horrific" but gently disquieting and frequently melancholy. The pacing so far is very nice too-Holmes knows where to end things, nothing drags on needlessly. That's refreshing in an age when so many genre writers seem to have lost the ability to edit themselves.


I was considering this, but ran away shrieking after reading the blurb. (I'm allergic to hyperbole.) Ok, I'll give it a shot.

Oh, my! I hadn't even noticed that blurb. That is hilarious. The collection is solid and, as I mentioned, very enjoyable in that old-fashioned British ghost story manner, but nowhere near as thrilling as the hyperbolic assessment on the work page promises.

Catherine Dousteyssier-Khoze, The Beauty of the Death Cap
Brian Evenson, Reports

Dreams of Ourselves. All of the authors used Pessoa heteronyms. Part of our buddy read is to try and figure out who the actual author is for each story based on our own previous reading of these Ex Occidente authors like Mark Valentine, Colin Insole, John Howard, Quentin Crisp, Damian Murphy, etc.

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