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-   -   What book u reading at the moment? (https://www.horror.com/forum/showthread.php?t=19622)

waveriderx 03-23-2011 03:22 PM

very interesting ebook
 
I'm reading the ebook Haunted by Jordan LeBlanc. Pretty emotionally disturbing story. For a debut novel, it crosses lines many horror veterans have dared to even approach. I got it off smashwords for 1.99. I think it's on the nook and apple ibookstore as well for the same price. Worth a look, especially for less than 2 bucks.

If anyone wants to give it a look, it's here http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/39872

darkscrybe 03-24-2011 01:48 AM

I'm reading the Damnation Game by Barker. I've read it many times, I just like reacquainting myself with his work every now and again.

Fearonsarms 03-27-2011 06:23 AM

Damnation Game is a great book I love it :)

sfear 04-02-2011 06:28 AM

http://i819.photobucket.com/albums/z...fTheOccult.jpg
Finally got around to finishing this. Uneven mixture of essays to be sure. My favorite essay was of course "The Beating Of Black Wings: Supernatural Horror In Literature And The Fiction Of Edgar Allan Poe" by H.P. Lovecraft with Dorothy Scarborough's "Modern Ghost" a very close second, so much so I may order the book this essay was selected from new if I can't find a copy second hand. My least enjoyable essay was "Anthropology, Fiction, And The Occult: The Case Of Carlos Castaneda" by David Murray, not because of poor writing --- Murray is a very capable wordsmith --- but because this type of anthropological mysticism just doesn't appeal to me. Castaneda's books littered virtually every crack and crevice back in the seventies when I was spending all my time and money (I was single and employed fulltime) building my book collection. Wasn't attracted to them then and after seeing two of them in good condition at Goodwill the other day felt no nostalgic tug of missed opportunity.
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hammerfan 04-04-2011 06:41 AM

I'm reading two books at the moment: Wish You Were Here by Rita Mae Brown and Sense and Sensibility and Zombies.

I'm struggling to get through Sense and Zombies. I'm not enjoying it as much as I enjoyed Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter.

FreddyMyers 04-05-2011 09:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by darkscrybe (Post 888941)
I'm reading the Damnation Game by Barker. I've read it many times, I just like reacquainting myself with his work every now and again.

Funny, doing the same thing: Midnight Meat Train, The Yattering and Jack, and Pig Blood Blues. All three this morning during a rain storm. Love reading horror while its rainy and gloomy outside.

hammerfan 04-06-2011 06:22 AM

Starting Rest in Pieces by Rita Mae Brown and Twilight (yeah, I know)

Mortis 04-07-2011 05:26 PM

Reading Salem's Lot again...I read Bram Stoker's Dracula and decided to give King's novel another read through while I was in the vampire mood..

ChronoGrl 04-08-2011 05:49 AM

Just finished The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins and loved it. It's young adult, but I HIGHLY recommend it to everyone here. It's a fast read and utterly engaging. Pretty psyched to read the next one.

Quote:

If there really are only seven original plots in the world, it's odd that boy meets girl is always mentioned, and society goes bad and attacks the good guy never is. Yet we have Fahrenheit 451, The Giver, The House of the Scorpion—and now, following a long tradition of Brave New Worlds, The Hunger Games. Collins hasn't tied her future to a specific date, or weighted it down with too much finger wagging. Rather less 1984 and rather more Death Race 2000, hers is a gripping story set in a postapocalyptic world where a replacement for the United States demands a tribute from each of its territories: two children to be used as gladiators in a televised fight to the death.Katniss, from what was once Appalachia, offers to take the place of her sister in the Hunger Games, but after this ultimate sacrifice, she is entirely focused on survival at any cost. It is her teammate, Peeta, who recognizes the importance of holding on to one's humanity in such inhuman circumstances. It's a credit to Collins's skill at characterization that Katniss, like a new Theseus, is cold, calculating and still likable. She has the attributes to be a winner, where Peeta has the grace to be a good loser.It's no accident that these games are presented as pop culture. Every generation projects its fear: runaway science, communism, overpopulation, nuclear wars and, now, reality TV. The State of Panem—which needs to keep its tributaries subdued and its citizens complacent—may have created the Games, but mindless television is the real danger, the means by which society pacifies its citizens and punishes those who fail to conform. Will its connection to reality TV, ubiquitous today, date the book? It might, but for now, it makes this the right book at the right time. What happens if we choose entertainment over humanity? In Collins's world, we'll be obsessed with grooming, we'll talk funny, and all our sentences will end with the same rise as questions. When Katniss is sent to stylists to be made more telegenic before she competes, she stands naked in front of them, strangely unembarrassed. They're so unlike people that I'm no more self-conscious than if a trio of oddly colored birds were pecking around my feet, she thinks. In order not to hate these creatures who are sending her to her death, she imagines them as pets. It isn't just the contestants who risk the loss of their humanity. It is all who watch.Katniss struggles to win not only the Games but the inherent contest for audience approval. Because this is the first book in a series, not everything is resolved, and what is left unanswered is the central question. Has she sacrificed too much? We know what she has given up to survive, but not whether the price was too high. Readers will wait eagerly to learn more.Megan Whalen Turner is the author of the Newbery Honor book The Thief and its sequels, The Queen of Attolia and The King of Attolia. The next book in the series will be published by Greenwillow in 2010.
http://www.amazon.com/Hunger-Games-S.../dp/0439023483

hammerfan 04-12-2011 04:35 AM

I put aside Twilight and started reading The Pumpkin Muffin Murders by Livia J. Washburn


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