Horror Aficionados discussion

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The Only Good Indians
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The only good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones



As you like it. The 1. is fine with me but we can also start later if that's better for you.
Haha, I know what do mean. So many BRs, I try to write down everything in my journal 😂 there's an actual 'time-table' for it now 😂

Aug 1 is fine for me for Indians...anyone else need to weigh in?

Really? I just bought it and it’s in my Kindle library now.


I guess I just have to wait :(

Were you born in Germany? I took German in high school and have been trying to relearn it on Duolingo :)

Yes, I was born in (West-)Germany. Oh, I didn't know that you could learn it in the US. I thought most high schools teach Spanish as a foreign language? I always hear that countries in Europe don't teach German any more. We seem to be not so popular anymore 😂
Duolingo is a great app. I used it a lot during my university days

Yes, I was born in (West-)Germany. Oh, I didn't know that you could learn it in the US. I thought most h..."
Many highschools in the US offer a variety of languages. Spanish is common, but German, French, Japanese, Chinese, Russian...you see them all. I'll try to message you in German if I'm feeling brave 😊

I hope everyone will be enjoying this book. Have you read anything else by SGJ yet?

Yes, I was born in (West-)Germany. Oh, I didn't know that you could learn it in the US. I t..."
That's interesting and I had no idea! Be brave and do write to me in German. I would love that! ☺️


Of course, Frances! The more, the better! Welcome to HA and to this buddy read. I hope we'll all have a good time reading The only good Indians :)

Welcome, Frances!


It always relieves me to know that I'm not the only crazy person who has such a pile of books needing to be read...I have to keep a folder for the current month or I'd forget which ones were on deck :)

It always relieves me to know that I'm not t..."
Lisa, since I'm new to GR, I've been so excited that I finally have people to read with that I've joined a few groups. So, yes, I printed out an August month calendar on A4 bond and pencilled in the books that I can reasonably read with minimal sleep. I usually am a 1-book gal. But juggling books now is adding spice to my previously boring life. ❤️

It always relieves me to know t..."
I've had the same experience since joining GR. I used to read strictly one book at a time, and now it can be 4-5. I can't turn down group/buddy reads! And the HA group is the BEST! Really great people, lots of discussion and communication, and very well-organized.



It always relie..."
Same here. I've read one book at a time and if there wasn't any time or I wasn't that interested in the book anymore, I didn't read for weeks. I had a total of 12-13 books per year before I joined GR. Wow, what a blast. I am now reading several books all the time, depending on mood and location (kindle if I am not at home or if baby sleeps in the bed with me, instead of not reading at all). I joined so many BRs and made great friend here on GR, especially in this HA group and now I generally read 40-60 books a year. It's insane that I was proud of my 12 books before 😂 I am enjoying every bit of this community here, but I also need a reading schedule 😂
Kimberly wrote: "I got this book but things keep popping up and so I sit the book down. Im joining the buddy read so I can enjoy with friends and not get distracted."
Welcome Kimberly!
Great to have you here!
Anne (w/ an E) wrote: "Hi everyone! I won this book in a ŷ Giveaway and I keep trying to read it but things keep getting in the way. I am up to page 25, but I am also currently reading a book that just came in on..."
Hi Anne!
Same here, I finally have my copy of this book but almost no time to read. But this weekend will be dedicated to The only good Indians, I make sure to get some reading done 😄

It..."
Yes yes yes to all of this. I am really grateful for having found ŷ a couple of years ago. I have always loved books and reading, but it has literally changed my reading life. I have also gone from 12-15 books a year to 60ish. It's so much fun, and ŷ has become my Facebook :) I'm on this site multiple times each day :)
Soooo, I'm just 37 pages in, but feeling like I now remember why I ended up not finishing Jones' "When the People Lights Have Gone Off". His writing style is just infuriatingly hard to grasp.
I could barely understand what was happening in the opening chapter, though it seemed to get back to more normal writing after. But now it's bouncing back and forth from normal cadence to somewhere in between stream-of-consciousness and dude-bro lingo. Why can't Jones write like a normal human being....
I could barely understand what was happening in the opening chapter, though it seemed to get back to more normal writing after. But now it's bouncing back and forth from normal cadence to somewhere in between stream-of-consciousness and dude-bro lingo. Why can't Jones write like a normal human being....

I c..."
I know what you mean. In a way I like it, I feel like I'm watching something unfold and that I'm privy to someone's thoughts and conversations, instead of having the story explained to me in typical fashion. But I find myself getting a bit lost sometimes and needing to reread.

I c..."
I didn't have any problems with that one, but I was baffled by the ceiling fan in the next chapter. It took me going back and skimming the page twice before I figured out that the ceiling was high.

Done. My final thoughts on it:
Well, that was a weird read. Weird AF. Jones' writing style really threw the whole book off for me. The change back and forth from occasionally usual prose to swings that were almost stream-of-consciousness and plain old bro-dude lingo made for difficult to follow story throughout the book. And there were way too many chapters of nothing really happening. just thoughts of characters that often had little bearing on the story, and even important and action scenes dragged out longer than they needed to be. Had this been a 100-page novella it might have been more palatable. In the end, it was an often confusing with an off-kilter cadence.
I'm now done with Jones. He just doesn't write to my liking.
Well, that was a weird read. Weird AF. Jones' writing style really threw the whole book off for me. The change back and forth from occasionally usual prose to swings that were almost stream-of-consciousness and plain old bro-dude lingo made for difficult to follow story throughout the book. And there were way too many chapters of nothing really happening. just thoughts of characters that often had little bearing on the story, and even important and action scenes dragged out longer than they needed to be. Had this been a 100-page novella it might have been more palatable. In the end, it was an often confusing with an off-kilter cadence.
I'm now done with Jones. He just doesn't write to my liking.


It's the same with me. I like his writing style and to get to know the thoughts of the characters, but once in a while I have to reread, too.
I am 30+ pages in now and am looking it. Not so much the first chapter, but the second one I am enjoying very much so far

Take your time, I also just started. No need to rush :)
I know what you mean with books like War and Peace. That's what I do all the time with books like this. Looking up everything and taking notes is a lot of fun (well, not for everyone, but I enjoy it a lot :D).




It seems like the best point for a pause. If the book actually ended right there, I'd probably give it four stars. (view spoiler)
The perspective is third person limited, but it is so limited that it reads almost like first person. How much I like it seems to depend on the situation. I can sometimes get confused when the author is writing scenes with action in them. The narration doesn't include enough information about the scenery for me to picture what is happening. It works best for me in the bits that have the main character telling a story to other characters. It shifts between time periods very seamlessly. (view spoiler)

I recently read There There, and I noticed there are some similarities in the writing style. Has anyone else read it?

Dawn, it is a good read. Challenging, but fun and worth it for me.

Totally get that! 😟

Yes, I just read that paragraph. I was just so confused the first time reading this. Glad I am not alone 😂
I agree, I am linking the book but it's not always easy to get what the author is telling us.
Frances wrote: "I am enjoying it. It’s just hard to understand what some phrases mean when he slips into (what we will now trademark as Alan’s) “bro-dude-lingo�. ."
I'm trademarking that phrase so y'all will owe me every time you use it. :P
I'm trademarking that phrase so y'all will owe me every time you use it. :P

It seems like the best point for a pause. If the book..."
I'm stopped at the same point, Vanessa. Totally agree with what you said about action scenes being difficult to follow. I'm enjoying this though. Different and disturbing.
Books mentioned in this topic
Carry On (other topics)Fangirl (other topics)
There There (other topics)
War and Peace (other topics)
War and Peace (other topics)
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Vanessa, Lisa and me are going to read The only good Indians by SGJ in August. Please feel free to join us :)