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Horror lit thread! last one got archived. What are you guys reading?
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>>23816288
Started reading all of Barker's Books of Blood, pretty enjoyable
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After 4 months, I was finally able to order a physical copy of this. It was so hard to get. Looking forward to reading it.
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>>23816288
Just finished Haunted Castles by Ray Russell, which was pretty damn good. Now starting on some gothic short stories by Robert Louis Stevenson.
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What's your guys favorite short story?
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>>23817722
Nyarlathotep goes pretty hard
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>>23817722
"The White People" by Machen.
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Any recommendations for books where people experience and navigate really weird places? Already read annihilation and a short stay in hell.
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>>23817981
Sounds like an A24 premise; a midbrow horror film that's an allegory for whiteness and the trauma of black and indigenous people
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>>23818187
So you don't know what the story is about then.
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>>23817722
“Toother” by Terry Dowling
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>>23818198
I was just having a little laugh! I'm definitely gonna read Machen at some point, seems like a fascinating writer
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>>23816288
Thank you for starting the thread, OP, but let’s get a bit more gas with a thread question(s):
>What element of your current reading makes it successfully horrific?
>Where does it fall short?
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>>23818273
He's one of my favourites. If you want to read a collection, I would suggest The Great God Pan and Other Horror Stories.
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Need some recs for stuff like The Fisherman and Experimental Film (no they're not that alike, but things in either vein). Also, in terms of film, I Saw The TV Glow.
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>>23818398
Is there a novel called Experimental Film, or do you mean experimental film? Btw, I want to see that tranny movie so bad... I guess I should torrent it since it isn't playing near me
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>>23818640
NTA, but Experimental Film is a novel by Gemma Files.
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>>23818741
Hmm... seems like a kind of an interesting novel. Is it any good? Anyway, whenever I see a capitalized "Experimental" my mind goes immediately to Serial Experiments Lain and it gives me like an instant rush of dopamine, I freaking love that show lol
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>>23818741
>Gemma Files
How is she? I always hear people say she's up there with John Langan,Laird Barron, and Nathan Ballingrud. Which book should I check out?
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>>23818398
>>23818640
>The Fisherman and Experimental Film
>(no they're not that alike, but things in either vein)
>Also, in terms of film
>Uhhhhhh is there a novel called Experimental Film, or do you mean experimental film?
Okay, I'm fucking retarded (ESL)
>>
Is there any horror novel like the those movies where all you see are reports where things keep getting more and more disturbing till it seems like the world is about to end? Ex Dawn of the Dead (2004) - Special Report: Zombie Invasion or Without Warning (1994 film)
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>>23819138
Reading World War Z by Max Brooks gave me that feeling. It's not like the movie at all. Fantasticland by Mike Bockoven, while not amazing, is a fun read.
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>>23816288
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>>23818935
The Fisherman and Experimental Film are both the titles of novels. I was also asking for books like the real life movie I Saw The TV Glow
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Favorite cover art?
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>>23816288
Literature is the wrong medium for horror. It's already difficult for cinema to instill terror. That said, books are often superior to their movie adaptations, a prime example being I Am Legend. But it's not scary.
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>>23819471
A book can't really jumpscare you, no, but literature can instill dread with more clarity than I have ever personally gotten from a movie.
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>>23819471
The problem is that what you can do to live action is infinitely more limited than literature. That's why a huge part of it is zombies, ghosts, serial killers, and random bullshit that makes no sense, plus anything but perfect top tier acting fuck up all the immersion. Maybe CGI/AI will change it in a few decades
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>>23819488
Jumpscares are shit and not what I was talking about. When using your own imagination, you are in control. Terror is instilled by a lack of control. It's like tickling yourself versus getting tickled. Humans are primarily visual, as is reflected by the relative amount of brain matter dedicated to each sense. Literature is like a recipe, your imagination does the cooking. With audiovisual medium, you are an observer, you are no longer the chef.

>>23819493
>live action is infinitely more limited than literature
True, live action is inherently bad because it is too dependent on human performance.
>decades
Have you been living under a rock? Frontier AI is already smarter than the average person. We will likely have AI generated movies better than anything human made within the next 2-4 years.
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>>23816288
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4V8SqCr263g
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What a I in for?
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>>23819605
*am
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https://youtube.com/@theslashtraxnetwork?si=jcUsd-NYd0-trc96
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>>23816288
can someone recc books which will scare the shit out of me???
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>>23820234
If you don't tell us what scares you, people can't help you. Also read The Girl Next Door by Jack Ketchum if you want to have a bad time
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>>23820317
I've never been scared by a novel or film in my adult life. That is why I ask for a recc. I get scared about the dangers in our world, if a fiction novel is able to induce a similar horror, somehow, then great.
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>>23819605
Gross descriptions but very shallow. Don't understand the love for Aron Beauregard. Describing something disgustingly isn't what makes horror work. It's like making a painting out of your own shit and expecting someone to recoil in fear and laud it as a horrific masterpiece.
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>>23819605
Imo these extreme shock novels are boring and a drag to get through, you only see the main character as victim fodder so you don't give a shit about them.
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You guys have recommendations for horror fiction about nature, animal and plants. I know Algernon Blackwood and Richard Gavin get recommended. I was thinking of picking up a copy of Cujo.
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>>23817722
The stephen king story about the guy stuck on the island
>>
>>
Frankenstein and Dracula are both comfy
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>>23821712
Scott Smith's The Ruins wasn't for me, but it's nature/plant horror.
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>>23821771
Care to elaborate on haunted?
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The summer people by Shirley Jackson was creepy.
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Recs for some sweet sweet folk horror please
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>>23817722
The Shadow over Innsmouth, if you can call it a short story.
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>>23816288
Valerie and Her Week of Wonders
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>>23821813
The author's writing style is questionable but it's good if you like modern horror
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>>23817722
I really like Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, but it's barely a horror story. The only story I have ever read that manages to make "then the protagonist woke up" a satisfying ending.
Ballad of the Flexible Bullet is also great, but again it's not very spooky in the traditional sense. More of a look into the nature of mental instability.
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>>23821876
>The Shadow over Innsmouth
I can't find it scary after finding out it's basically a story about lovecraft finding out he's 1/32 black and moving to a black majority city and a black rights group while calling himself black.
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>>23816288
I guess I'll ask this here:

I haven't read any Horror novels except At the Mountains of Madness. I also really like The Monkey's Paw short story. I like the fear of the unknown and monsters you can't conceive of or you die type tropes.

What should I read?
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>>23821712
Animorphs
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>>23822040
If you liked Mountains of Madness, more of Lovecraft's well known stories would be a sure bet. Call of Cthulhu most matches what you describe and is obviously the most popular of his stories. The Whisperer in the Darkness is sort of similar to Mountains of Madness in that it deals with what was at the time very new and shrouded in mystery, but is now commonplace so it might seem comical. Pickman's Model would be my personal pick for your criteria.
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>>23822071
Thank you, I'll check 'em all out.
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>>23822040
Not really a horror story but the Three Body Problem trilogy from Cixin Liu was scarier than any horror story with aliens to me. Simply because The Dark Forest hypothesis is a very real possibility if several aliens species exist or existed.
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>>23822040
>I like the fear of the unknown and monsters you can't conceive of or you die type tropes.

Start with The King in Yellow, is the original and one of the most praised novels of all times.
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>>23818008
There's that one where they find mummified Tibetans in a cave and it turns out there's a hollow earth "real hell."
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>>23816360
where'd you order from? never seen a physical copy.
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>>23822124
Jeff Long's The Descent?
I really enjoyed that one. The sequel was a bit of a stinker in comparison but I still enjoyed it.
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>>23818008
>AIEEEEEEEE HORRIFICABLE THINGS AFOOT, NAY I CAN NARY EVEN SPEAK OF THEM
>walk into old colleagues room
>AIEEEEEEEEEEE SUCH THINGS I CAN NARY EVEN SPEAK, SUFFICE TO SAY OLD COLLEAGUE IS NO LONGER AFOOTABLE
rinse and repeat. lame
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>>23816933
What a bunch of slop and garbage. Only the first column is horror.
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>>23822226
What is missing?
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Started reading some Brian Lumley lately since I found a couple of them used I'm making my way through the Dagon's Bell collection. Going to try and track down the other Necroscope novels. He's got a pretty unique approach to how to handle Lovecraftian beings, I like how there is a bit of fight in his characters rather than just letting them sit back and accept the inevtible dread and despair.
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>>23819605
>>23819627
>>23820680
>>23821094
I liked it desu.
Next up:
>
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There are no good horror books. Change my mind.
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>>23823002
Solzhenitsyn Cancer Ward
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>>23816288
Are House on the Borderland and The Night Land both by William Hope Hodgson related?
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What's the opposite genera than horror fiction. Like if you took Steven King who is his complete opposite?
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>>23823105
real murders descriptions
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>>23823105
>Like if you took Steven King who is his complete opposite?
Terry Pratchett.
>Elaborate on that
No.
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I started going through Stephen Kings work. Went through the Dark Tower, and liked it... mostly. I started the Mr Mercedes series, and they were retarded. I followed it up with the Outsider not realising it was a sequel to the Mr Mercedes books, and that book was great until the autist Redditor shows up. I'm thinking I check out Night Shift.
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>>23823407
I'd say check out Night Shift and Skeleton Crew for short stories, and The Shining, Misery, and 'Salem's Lot for novels if you want some of his best
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>>23817722
Leaving out Lovecraft, The Procession of the Black Sloth by Laird Barron.
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Reading Slow Burn by Bobby Adair. Pretty good zombie slop ngl.
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>>23824302
Did this motherfucker really name the protagonist of his zombie novels Zed? I might give it a shot but judging from the synopsis I'm not expecting much. Zombie stuff seems destined to remain bottom of the barrel trash even among its contemporaries in the horror genre.
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>>23824581
and that's a good thing. You don't expect a lore heavy high brow mumbo jumbo with zombie books, it's all Tom Clancy survival nitty gritty pulp.
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>>23824617
That was kinda my point to begin with. Most horror can be considered pulp, and I like pulp. But pretty much all zombie shit I've tried so far was just plain shit.
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>>23824653
Works 4 me
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>Why yes I deliberately wrote my 500+ pages horror/fantasy epic in the most archaic prose imaginable, how could you tell?
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>>23824904
Imagine what he could've written had he survived the war
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If it doesn't have Loona from helluva boss, then I'm not interested, simple as.
>>
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>>23826213
Ah yes, "Tell me I'm worthless" now that's a good book!
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>>23817722
It’s not really unique but Poe’s Fall of the House of Usher is good. Chaucer’s Friar’s Tale is another one- it has the devil in it and the message is about a Franklin (as in the medieval job) being damned to hell through his own avarice.
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>>23822864
Just don't go down the slide. Problem solved.
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Is there a splatterpunk chart?
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>>23827239
On reddit
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>>23827664
Ha, ha. Funny guy.
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>>23828040
I'm not joking, there's a chart on extreme horror that was made very recently. Splatterpunk isn't really my thing so I don't know if it's a good chart but it's there
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>>23822136
NTA:
https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-divine-farce-michael-s-a-graziano/21776069?ean=9781935248040
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>>23828139
NTA, but splatterpunk is not really the same as extreme horror.
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>>23828215
There seems to be loads of splatterpunk on that list but fair enough, it isn't my area. What does differentiate it, out of curiosity? I often see The Cipher on splatterpunk lists which struck me as incorrect so clearly I could do with some educating
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>>23828299
Splatterpunk is a subgenre of horror that originated in the 80's, and was big in the 80's and 90's (and kind of ended in the late 90's). It is a combination of horror that is more extreme than was the norm at the time, and has punk, queer, counterculture themes that set themselves apart from traditional, suggestive horror by being more direct, gory and in your face. Splatterpunk tends to have a message when it comes to culture, sociopolitical issues, etc., and uses the more intense horror to make those points. Note that not all splatterpunk is extreme.

Extreme horror is a subgenre that was created from splatterpunk, and is written a lot right now. (Sometimes current writers of extreme horror call their work splatterpunk as if it's interchangeable with extreme horror, so be mindful of that.) Extreme horror sets out to simply write the most extreme stuff you can imagine, especially in regard to (sexual) abuse and torture. There's no deeper meaning behind the work or acts described, and tends to have a pretty low quality of writing. This is more pulpy and sensational than splatterpunk.

I'm not super well read when it comes to splatterpunk, but some works that I can recommend that belong in that subgenre are:
>Clive Barker - Books of Blood (not that extreme)
>Kathe Koja - The Cipher (not that extreme)
>Poppy Z Brite - Exquisite Corpse
>Jack Ketchum - The Girl Next Door
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>>23828384
>Sometimes current writers of extreme horror call their work splatterpunk as if it's interchangeable with extreme horror, so be mindful of that
This is probably where my confusion comes from. Makes sense why The Cipher is in the list now, thanks! I guess I thought the definitions were the other way round.
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>>23824904
wait, WHH was a bodybuilder? based
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>>23828384
Thank you
>>
Which of these should I get:
Lafcadio Hearn - Japanese Ghost Stories
Nathaniel Hawthorne - Mosses From an Old Manse
Best of Richard Matheson
Likewise for Arthur Machen
Likewise for Clark Ashton Smith
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>>23822864
Any care to give me a spoiler run down of this book? Is it just torturing kids or what
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>>23828384
All know about slatterpunk is that one of the few horror literary critics who takes the genre too serious S.T Joshi hates the movement and dislikes most of the writers.
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Just recently finished Laird Barron's new short story collection and thought it was pretty shit until I got to the afterward section where he talks about how he almost died and is essentially physically fucked and then I felt like the world's biggest asshole.
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>>23816288
malpertuis by jean ray
looks pretty interesting especially after reading the prologue
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>>23828895
That's one of my favourites! I hope you'll enjoy it
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>>23822281
Missing? It has too much slop and not enough quality. "Early horror" for books written in the 20th century, lmao.
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>>23822040
machen, king in yellow, and other lovecraft. thats all along those veins.
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>>23829007
Which works are slop in your opinion, and which quality works are missing?
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>>23829039
Almost everything under the mislabel of "early horror" is high quality. Almost everything after that is slop.
> are missing?
Too many. I may as well do a new chart.
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>>23829180
okay boomer
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>>23817981
this is the most unsettling story i've read
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>>23829407
Read a synopsis, sounds kinda gay. The Great God Pan is great though.
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>>23828638
Clark Ashton Smith is pretty fantastical
Machen is more literary I think, I'd go with him
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>>23829414
why bother reading a synopsis when there are probably several tik tok videos breaking down the themes of the story in a neat little 20 second package, do you not care about your time expenditure? that's totally sus bro ngmi skill issue fr
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>>23829423
>Tiktok
I'm too old for that shit
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>>23829428
I know I'm just angry and defensive of this story
the white people is very atmospheric, i doubt a synopsis conveys the full scope, though it's very scattered and full of random vignettes so it's a style over structure situation
everyone should at least give it a shot, it sucks that Great God Pan has overshadowed White People, they're both good, but White People is a perfect story as far as I'm concerned
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>>23829180
You sound like a retard who can't back up his shit opinion.
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>>23829180
Ah, so you're just an edgelord without a real opinion
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Good books about haunted houses?
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>>23829784
The Shining is incredible psychological horror.
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>>23822040
The Other Side of the Mountain. Really good.
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>>23823096
No they are separate books.
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>>23829784
Haunting of Hill House
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Currently reading Under The Dome. So far it's been really good. Gonna read IT after
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>>23821712
The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones was decent nature horror about some modern day Native Americans.
I really liked The Ruins by Scott Smith. A really good nature horror.
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>>23829250
why would anyone want to read that.
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>>23829418
>>23828638
Okay I went with Machen and Japanese Ghost Stories.
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>>23831084
Sounds good! Which collection of Machen are you going to get? I still want to read Japanese Ghost Stories myself.
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Reading HP Lovecraft Omnibus. Dude really didn't write much.
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>>23831463
Lovecraft is the worst of the "cosmic horror" authors. Don't care if he's considered the "OG" his stories are shit.
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>>23831405
I went with the Penguin collection The White People and Other Weird Stories. Didn't realize until after that it doesn't include The Great God Pan, maybe they thought they would save it for a second volume. But that's okay.
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>>23832528
I had bought the Great God Pan & Other Stories and I'm pretty sure The White People was included in that collection ironically.
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what am I in for?
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>>23832528
Should have gotten the Oxford Press edition desu
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>>23833259
It's a pretty sick book. Well written and compelling, it accomplishes what it sets out to do. One bit that I vividly remember years after reading it is the girl has a stab wound on her arm and she's digging and scratching at it. I'm glad I read it but I won't read it again.
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>>23833259
A well written book that's gonna make you feel like absolute shit
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Splatterpunk bores me. I found some stories here far more effective, like Making Snakes.
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any recommendations for well written horror?
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>>23834231
>Algernon Blackwood - The Wendigo and Other Stories
>Thomas Tryon - The Other
>Angela Carter - The Bloody Chamber
>Kathe Koja - The Cipher
>Poppy Z Brite - Exquisite Corpse
>Nathan Ballingrud - North American Lake Monsters

These are ones that are more on the literary side, and have great prose.
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>>23834272
>Nathan Ballingrud - North American Lake Monsters
Sell me on this one
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>>23835207
Incredible psychological horror stories where the supernatural is more in the background, and the stories are more about the effects the traumatic events have on the characters, and their struggles and failures to deal with it. Highly recommend it.
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>>23835215
That sounds awful. I was expecting sea monsters.
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>>23835217
lol and lmao
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Splatterpunk sea monster books pls
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>>23835433
The Haar by David Sodergren
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>>23817722
the wendigo by blackwood. the beautiful stranger by shirley jackson.
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I copped Dracula from library, what am I in for?
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>>23836874
An incredible first third, and then things slowing down a lot.
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Horror for me is a purely visual medium, I cannot conceive of the written word eliciting such a reaction from me -- adrenaline/excitement, sure, but not actual terror/horror/dread. However I am completely unfamiliar with the genre, the only "horror" novel I've ever read being Dracula back when I was a kid, so give me your scariest and most atmospheric horror novels! My current to-read-list looks like this
>The Fisherman
>The Haunting of Hill House
>some King (Salem's Lot, Misery, Danse Macabre for non-fictional reading)
Although I'm fine with "human" horror (e.g. serial killers), I am primarily interested in fiction that deals implicitly or explicitly with the supernatural.
>>
>>23838133
I actually recommend the Splatterpunk genre of horror to many because it is very graphic and visceral stuff that at the very least kicks off the revulsion side of horror.
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>>23838157
Thanks for the rec, but gross-out horror is very low on my list of reading priorities. I might check it out though.
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>>23819455
Is this book a Reddit/Goodreads meme or is it actually good?
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>>23838133
Read The Shining even if you've seen the movie. It's very different and it's excellent. Also check out Hell House by Richard Matheson.
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>>23838133
>I need le heckin' jump spookerinos to be scurred
Go back to Plebbit
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>>23838157
Splatterpunk ain't the one for someone that isn't scared of books.
>>
What are the longest horror novels not written by Stephen King?
Bonus points for exreme horror and/or splatterpunk
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>>23838700
Swan Song by Robert McCammon
The Terror by Dan Simmons

you should read both of those
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>>23838700
Almost anything by Peter Straub, specially Ghost Story, Floating Dragon and Koko.
Also the Blackwater series by Michael Mcdowell.
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>>23838133
The only time I got that hit of adrenaline was when I was reading Pet Sematary, specifically the part where the kid gets run down by a truck. My stomach dropped pretty hard in that moment.
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>>23838832
>>23839014
thanks anons
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>>23838700
For older books, The Mysteries of Udolpho, and Varney the Vampire, for newer books House of Leaves
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>>23821712
For killer dog books, I think Hell Hound by Ken Greenhall is the better novel. The narrative is punchier and less flabby imo. Valancourt Books did a reprint
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>>23828789
Too bad about his physical ailments, but I felt like Barron is an author who dropped off hard. I liked his early collections but thought Swift to Chase was a steaming pile of garbage and I haven't read anything of his since
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>>23829784
The Elementals by Michael McDowell... a southern gothic haunted house novel with a good dose of black humor. His Cold Moon Over Babylon is an excellent "revenge ghost" tale as well
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Anyone have a link for this, preferably as an .epub? My library doesn't have it and I own way too many books. Not on libgen either.
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>>23840082
Anna's Archive, bro
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>>23839953
Yeah, I really felt like Swift To Chase is where it all started to go downhill. His novellas X's For Eyes and that one about the Yakuza member weren't bad at all though.
>>
>>23839953
S.T Joshi said the same thing about Barron.
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>>23841411
>S.T Joshi
Takes things that are public domain and sells them.
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>>23834220
Film Maudit is absolute kino
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Where can I share my horror story with like minded people who won't call me a shill?
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>>23842071
Shill
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>>23816288
The Mona Lisa from Halo:Evolutions. I had a LOT of fun listening to it.
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>>23840894
based, thanks
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https://archive.org/details/price-of-fearUPGRADES
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>>23839905
>Varney the Vampire
Fucking penny dreadfuls were terrible.
>>
what do you guys do while you listen to audiobooks?
>>
>Archibald and Sir Gregory were walking down the street
>They stopped suddenly and Archibald pointed toward a house
>You see that house? My friend experienced a terrifying horror of utmost evil there
>My word! what happened?
>I don't know. He didn't say
>Well I hope he is ok now
>He isn't
>The End
I formally take back every meme about Lovecraft not describing his horror and apply them to Machen
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>>23842994
The Great God Pan is great, fuck you. Lovecraft is trash.
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>>23842998
Yeah I liked the part where uh wait hold on, I'll think of a part with something in a moment.
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>>23842484
I usually listen to audiobooks when jogging, cooking and doing laundry. Generally speaking when I'm doing anything that doesn't require my full attention but makes me unable to read or watch anything. Also for a 10-30 minutes in bed before going to sleep.
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>>23842998
love how machen nests his stories a few nests deep
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>>23816288
was watching ops picrel and noticed this bitch was reading wuthering heights
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>>23816360
What the fuck did I just read?

7+/10?
>>
>>23816288
It’s been mentioned already in this thread but I recently finished Annihilation. Incredibly good but I’m not sure I’d place it entirely in horror

The protagonist and thus the audience does not view the phenomena occurring in area x as horrifying but as something to be observed and studied
>>
>>23842484
play Call Of Duty
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I enjoyed this one
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>>23844263
I loved Roadside Picnic, should I bother with The Southern Reach books?
>>
>>23819471
Literature is the best for horror are you retarded?

Just finished reading little heaven and i felt nothing but despair at the ending
>>
>>23821756
Surviver type
>>
Is De Sade overhyped wrt grossness?
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>>23844694
he just turned his own fantasies into books
>>
>>23844715
sexual*
>>
>>23844694
I've read 120 Days of Sodom, it's easily one of the worst, most boring, repetitive works of ""literature"" that I've ever had the misfortune of reading.
>>
>>23844694
What dat text message say, PERVERT!?
>>
>>23844694
De Sade was just /gif/ in written form.
>>
>>23844741
This, I hope it's not your poor, dear old mum.. what if she finds out that her son is a literal fucking scumbag snuff smut reading psychopath?
>>
>>23828653
>poor families sign kids up to test secretive new playground gear
>but oh noez its actually torture equipment and you're all now trapped!

>>23833259
Bleak.

>>23839014
Massively struggling with pic related. I'm 7 hrs into the audiobook and whilst Straub is a great writer, it feels it needs a bit of trimming. Hes great at fleshing out everything but there's no tension and just waffle.

>>23842484
Drive to and from and during work.
>>
>>23844808
Forgot pic.
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>>23828653
>>23844808
Don’t forget the graphic descriptions of used dildo licking and shit eating
>>
>>23844815
I tried it a few years ago, DNF'd about a third of the way in. It had nice atmosphere but it was just... so... SLOW. I plan on giving it another try sometime this winter, because people rave about it and like I said I really did like the atmosphere. Hopefully it clicks for me this time.
>>
>>23844292
I haven’t read the others so I can’t guarantee their quality Annihilation genuinely changed my perspective about life, especially about humanity and whether we are the center of this world
>>
>>23844949
>whether we are the center of this world
lmao, really? The answer is "no" we're not.
>>
>>23829539
>Makes a list with 10 good books and 3000000000 slop
>Hey bro this sucks
>Can you tell me what is missing?
>Too much bro
>WTF YOU DONT HAVE A REAL OPINION SHUT UP SHUT SHUT UPPPPP!!11
Ok. Like I said, I will do another chart when I have time. Keep reading Stephen King and eating your slop.
>>
>>23845004
>What's missing? Ummm yeah just too much bro, it's so goddamn much I cannot give a single example, everything else is garbage though just trust me bro, you're not reading all the good books that I'm unable to name a single one of!!!
>>
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What am I in for?
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>>23845576
Slop
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>>23817722
Miss Mack, by Michael McDowell
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>>23845576
I read some of his books when I was a teenager, they're sort of amusing at that age but he isn't a very good writer
>>
I finished Under the dome and it was awfully boring. Nothing worth mentioning happens after they figure out they cant damage the dome. I could have dropped the book the moment the acid didnt work and I'd have missed anything
>>
>>23846121
That's not horror
>>
>>
>>23847837
Literally me
>>
>>23817722
Mackintosh Willy by Ramsey Campbell
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>>23817722
is this sentence grammatically correct? it feels wrong as an ESL but so does you guys, or you guys's
>>
>>23848089
no, but it's not so weird as to get people's hackles up. You Guys' would probably be more common and more correct but it's about equally childish and freewheeling as a construction.
>>
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I highly recommend old chinese collections of strange and spooky tales. There are some genuinely haunting, grotesque, colorful and beautiful tales that stands the test of time
>>
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>>23848324
My favourite must be The Shadow Book of Ji Yun. It covers some allegedly true paranormal cases that really resembles thing we talk about today, like Bigfoot/Yeti, "glitches in the matrix", and alien/fair folk abductions.
I was also suprisingly moved by his writing, there are some truly profound tales and observations here that made a deep impression on me
>>
>>23848324
Any particular suggestions? I read Pu Songling's collection years ago and it's disappointing fucking garbage.
>>
>>23848362
Those are the three I've managed to get my hands on so far haha. If you want less fantasy/romance and more grotesque, nightmare-ish allegedly tue horror stories read Zibuyu (my second favourite). It's 1000+ long, but never boring
If you want something that takes a look on various paranormal stories as possible facts and has some very interesting and timeless observations on it read the Shadow Book of Ji Yun (see this post >>23848332) It's just a couple hundred pages
Both have plenty of Jiangshi, ghosts, strange creatures and supernatural phenomena in them
>>
>>23848435
>Jiangshi
That's what I thought would be in pu songlings book
>>
Any good sci-fi horror?
>>
>>23848324
>Copies of Zibuyu run $400+
Holy shit.. how did you read it? It's not on libgen.
>>
>>23848488
there is one pretty cool one at the start, but yeah I thought there would be more too. The other two should be more to your taste if you want more jiangshi and similar spookiness

>>23848512
Annas archive or zlib
>>
>>23843473
Not a horror book, that's for sure.
>>
>>23816288
Just reread Misery. In some ways, the movie version was better, such as making Annie Wilkes seem sane at the start before she shows she's crazy, and it doesn't drag like the book does sometimes. But there were also some things which were inevitably lost on the adaptation, such as Paul's character development and his reflections on writing, and I wish he was a little more defiant in the film as he gets to be in the novel. Also, we were totally robbed of Kathy Bathes running over a policeman with a lawn mower.
>>
>>23838179
Anon, look at the cover... it's obviously complete faggotry.
>>
>>23816288
I'm going to be reading Poe's short stories this October.
>>
Anyone read the new Laird Barron? Worth it for someone who hated Swift to Chase or no?
>>
>>23844694
No not really, Sade is very unpleasant to put it mildly. I wouldn't reduce him to grossness either, his moral vision and his vision of nature are both very frightening and he has a very very sick sense of humor that makes what he describes a lot more disturbing. It's not just a bunch of mutilation and shit eating
>>
>>23817722
The story of the envious vizir and the ghoul

https://www.bartleby.com/lit-hub/hc/stories-from-the-thousand-and-one-nights/the-story-of-the-envious-wezir-and-the-prince-and-the-ghuleh/

It is the first few paragraphs in this link and it leaves a lasting impact. The prince is kidnapped and almost eaten by a ghoul but he feigns not knowing and asks the disguised ghoul how to rid himself of an enemy. The ghoul tells him to ask allah to curse his enemies which the prince does but of course the ghoul is actually the effected one because the ghoul is who he is referring to in his prayers unknown to her.
>>
I read this story for the first time 15 years ago and still think about it every now and again

http://theliteraryunderground.org/pindeldyboz/dnexam.html
>>
lol
>>
Any fantasy zombie lit that doesn't have bullshit steampunk Van Helsing protagonists?
>>
What are some killer clown books?
>>
>>23853392
Stephen King - It
Will Elliot - The Pilo Family Circus
Adam Cesare - Clown in a Cornfield (this one is YA)
>>
>>23853392
Clownflesh by Tim Curran
>>
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>>23853537
>>23853817
thanks
>>
>>23839014
What is Straub's best book? I saw the movie of Ghost Story and it was so boring I have avoided him ever since
>>
Between Lonely Vigils and Worse Things Waiting, which Manly Wade Wellman collection has the better selection of his horror tales?
>>
>>23854912
Try the Blue Rose trilogy: Koko, Mystery, and The Throat.

More of a thriller-mystery horror rather then supernatural.
>>
What’s some good Ancient Egyptian horror?

I’ve already read Under the Pyramids by Lovecraft and Lot No. 249 by Arthur Conan Doyle.
>>
the best book of the last century
>>
>>23856094
Jewel of the Seven Stars
>>
>>23854347
Killer Clown- John Wayne Gacy
t. Terry Sullivan
>>
>>23838298
OP here, I've read about a third now (just got through Jack's phone call with Ullman and Al) and it is indeed excellent, really loving it so far.
>>
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You fools don't deserve him, but I offer him up in peace
>>
Any books set in Nevada? Something about Area 51/extraterrestrials or hillbillies and abandoned places like in the "Horror in the high desert" movie.
>>
>>23819605
your autobiography
>>
>>23857104
Glad you like it!

>>23857177
>Any books set in Nevada?
I hate to keep circling back to King but he's written so much it's hard not to. Desperation is about a demonic redneck sheriff on a killing spree in a small town. It's pretty good.
>>
>>23817722
El Monte de las Ánimas by Gustavo Adolfo Becquer. The Fall of the House od Usher too.
>>
>>23847837
Utter utter shit.

>>23856116
LOVE the TV show. Dont think it translates well to a book. I imagine his recent stage readings would be based, maybe an audiobook too.
>>
>>23857273
>maybe an audiobook too.
Lucky you, his recordings of of TerrorTome and Incarcerat are both on youtube.
I assume it's unsanctioned, since the ones I listened to are private now. You can also get the real thing on audible or whatever if you insist on spending money.
>>
>>23829438
Yeah I thought The White People totally btfo The Great God Pan
>>
>>23816288
Can you recommend something interesting (not Stephen King) to start with the genre?
>>
Do you all know any recommendations similar to from (TV series)? something where there are people together who have to hide from monsters or something similar
>>
What are some good horror novellas (under 200 pages)?
>>
>>23857515
Clive Barker. Read Books of Blood and The Hellbound Heart and then move on unless you want to read Weaveworld and Imajica but those are fantasy. The anthology collection The Weird is pretty great for getting an overview of who's who and a sense of which writers you like.
>>
>>23857107
I was really excited to read this until I found out it was Cthulhu Mythos
>>
>>23858086
>Sheridan Le Fanu - Carmilla
>Robert Louis Stevenson - Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
>Henry James - The Turn of the Screw (if you enjoy James' ultra long sentences)
>Arthur Machen - The Great God Pan
>H.P. Lovecraft - At the Mountains of Madness
>Robert Bloch - Psycho
>Richard Matheson - I Am Legend
>Ira Levin - The Stepford Wives
>Susan Hill - The Woman in Black
>Stephen King - The Mist
>T.E.D. Klein - Dark Gods (collection of 4 novellas)
>Clive Barker - The Hellbound Heart
>Thomas Ligotti - My Work is Not Yet Done
>>
schizo-kino
>>
>>23841418
he's selling the editorial and critical job he does on them, very weird thing to have a problem with
>>
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Finished Rising last night, about to start this. This author seems to get a lot of praise but I don't know why, I feel like these books could be sold as PDFs on Amazon. He seems like an average writer to me. Also there's zombie animals, and they can all talk because they are possessed by demons. You can't pull off writing about a zombie goldfish attack, but this guy sure tried. Somehow I want to finish this damn series though and find out what happens.
>>
>>23860921
>He seems like an average writer to me.
He's an average writer but a great storyteller. I liked that the zombies (and zombie animals) were demon-possessed- makes it feel like Evil Dead's Deadites are taking over the world. Earthworm Gods/Earthworm Gods II is another take on the Apocalypse, this time with giant creatures including (but not limited to) the earthworms. Urban Gothic is a gore-drenched romp through an "abandoned" mansion inspired by Edward Lee's works. Castaways if a fun riff on Survivor-style reality shows inspired by Richard Laymon. Ghoul- possibly my favorite- is about a group of kids in a small town in the 80s facing off against a monster. Very IT-esque, in a good way. Anyway I'd recommend all of those if you like The Rising/City of the Dead, and it sounds like you... kinda (?)... do.
>>
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my list atm
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>>23857214
>Desperation
Thanks. Anything about UFO in the desolate countryside?
>>
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Picrel is pretty good. Strieber does a good job of incorporating traditional horror elements into the story rather than focusing entirely on the aliens. And it IS fiction...right?
>>
>>23817722
The Lottery
>>
>>23861431
He has another alien book
>>
>>23838700
>>23838832
Swan Song is great. I found it more beautiful than scary. But a great story.
>>
>>23861422
Dead Silence was unintentionally hilarious to me because the author was writing about space-ships with a five-year old's understanding of physics. She genuinely seemed to think that they were like cars and would stop moving when you turn the engines off. This was unfortunately a major plot point too.
>>
>>23861510
ruh roh
>>
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>>23816288
Is this the right thread for extreme horror/splatterpunk? I just learned about the genre and I'm interested in it. Starting with this one since it's said to be more of a hybrid between traditional and extreme, with a more serious focus on story too. Thinking of trying rougher splatter stuff from authors like Aron Beauregard after.
>>
>>23838832
>>23861484
>Swan Song getting a tv show
Please let it be good
>>
its finally time...wish me luck
>>
>>23861895
is this the poop one
>>
>>23861898
yes
>>
>>23838832
>>23861484
>>23861684
Is Swan a loli?
>>
>>23828994
Shut up faggot.
>>
>>23862062
Damn bitch, who shat in your spaghetti? Just enjoy some spooky books!
>>
>>23862124
I do but stop talking like a faggot, faggot.
>>
>>23862175
At least I don't talk like someone who is a little bit upsetti for no reason. What horror books have you enjoyed recently?
>>
>>23862197
Christine. Itt sucks but whatever. Coke King is the best king.
>>
>>23862404
Any King novels that you think are his best? for me it's The Shining and Misery, but I've only read 7 of his books.
>>
>>23821813
shitty grossout nonsense by a guy who never grew out of his 17 year old edgelord phase
>>
>>23862408
Revival is his best, but also his bleakest
>>
>80% of 120 Days Of Sodom is just little bullet points briefly describing his obscene sex fantasies, most of which involve eating shit
the fuck? this isn't even a novel. lame. are his other books any better?
>>
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Read Perfume if you haven't yet.
>>
>>23861676
I don't read extreme horror often because the writing is typically shit (I don't mind simple prose, but there's a difference between simple writing and childish writing). The Black Farm actually sounds interesting. Aron Beauregard's books look a lot less tempting for me to read.
>>
>>23863832
He didn't get to finish 120 Days. Justine and Juliette are both complete novels but they're massive and still kinda bullet pointish, Sade was encyclopedic and repetitive in an obsessive way.
>>
>>23862408
I've read like 14 which is not a lot compared to how many he's written total. I'd say read The Gunslinger, his anthologies, Hearts in Atlantis and Desperation and then move on to better writers. Only the anthologies (besides Different Seasons) and Desperation are horror though.
>>
>>23863832
Yeah, I also bought this and stopped reading halfway because I got bored.
>>
>>23863832
You know it is an unfinished novel right, with only a draft being the most complete version?
>>
this month i wanna read 'The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde' and 'Dracula'
am i in for some kino? still new to reading but one of the first books i started with was Frankenstein and i was pleasantly surprised to see it hold up as a modern incel novel
>>
>>23864409
I understand. I guess the thought of written extreme gore is a novelty to me. Black Farm is interesting so far, first person perspective in a novel threw me off though.
>>
Cozy horror?
>>
>>23865988
I find a lot of Stephen King quite cozy, he really captures the small town mid/late century America very well in a lot of his novels and short stories.
>>
>>23865988
>>23866193
Yeah, try Misery. It takes place in the winter and is pretty cozy.
>>
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I think I might get into reading Charles L. Grant’s Oxrun Station books. They’re a series of novels and collections set in the Connecticut town of Oxrun. Grant was a big proponent of what he called “quiet horror”, which was I guess some would call today cozy horror. Grant was also really inspired by the Universal Classic Monster movies. Looks like they’re good books for reading in October.

The books are:
>The Hour of the Oxrun Dead (1977)
>The Sound of Midnight (1978)
>The Last Call of Mourning (1979)
>The Grave (1981)
>Tales from the Nightside (1981)
>The Bloodwind (1982)
>Nightmare Seasons (1982)
>The Soft Whisper of the Dead (1982) (Part 1 of the Oxrun Trilogy)
>The Orchard (1986)
>The Dark Cry of the Moon (1986) (Part 2 of the Oxrun Trilogy)
>The Long Night of the Grave (1986) (Part 3 of the Oxrun Trilogy)
>Dialing the Wind (1989)
>The Black Carousel (1995)

Anyone else here read these before? They look good.

There’s also a short story called “Pride” that was only collected in Screaming Quietly: The Best of Charles L. Grant. There’s another Oxrun story that was only collected in an anthology called Chrysalis 3; the story is “The Peace That Never Passes”.
>>
>>23863880
Not a horror novel, it's a comedy
>>
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>>23866401
Other books by Charles L. Grant that I heard are good:

>A Glow of Candles and Other Stories (1981)
>The Nestling (1982)
>The Pet (1986)
>In a Dark Dream (1989)
>The Millennium Quartet (1997-1999)
>Scream Quietly: The Best of Charles L. Grant (2012)

He also did a series of anthologies called Shadows (1978-1991) which is where he collects stories from other authors in the “quiet horror” vein he was popular for. He also did other anthologies like Nightmares (1979), The Dodd, Mead Gallery of Horror (1983), Night Visions 2 (1985), and Gothic Ghosts (1997).
>>
well that was stupid
>>
>>23866634
What about Blender Babies?
>>
I've been reading some lovecraft and I'm just not feeling it. Most of the stories I'm reading are kinda hard to parse and the gist of all the stories was "whoaaaa really weird stuff is happening and this is so weirddddd" the end. I'm a little disappointed but maybe it's just not my taste or it didn't age to me. (aka I gotta refine my palate or something). Anyone got any other reqs of people landing in strange situations by beings that are beyond our comprehension? Looking for more of a slasher feel to it or an escape type thing.
>>
I haven't ever read truly unnerving horror but I'm also pretty inexperienced. I enjoyed King's greatest hits (IT, Pet Sematary) as well as a The Ruins, a relatively recent novel by Scott Smith.

Has anyone hear read The Castle of Otranto? That is next on my list. I don't know what to read after that but I'm open to suggestions. I'd love to read something that truly frightens me.
>>
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Started pic related about 120 pages in, they’re just pulling into Paris.

Third Buehlman book I’ve picked up. I enjoyed Those Across the River and The Lesser Dead
>>
>>23823483
Speaking of King, has anyone checked out his latest collection, You Like It Darker ?

Is it any good?
>>
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>>23823810
Cool, I was actually planning on reading that tonight. I enjoyed the first two stories in the collection
>>
>>23821712
Thor by Wayne Smith is written - very effectively - from the pov of a dog. Both a horror story and a thriller. Not as intense as Cujo, but quite a good read. Read the opening sequence, where Thor chases a rabbit, and you'll know whether it's for you or not.
>>
Dusted off my kindle recently with "A Head full of Ghosts". It's alright. How does Tremblay generally rate because other stuff by him was recommended.
I'm not sure what to call the genre but also would like horror-ish recommendations for House of Leaves/Control/SCP type horror and/or unreliable reality/narrator Vanilla Sky type stuff.
>>
someone bake?
>>
>>23861310
I'm invested in seeing what happens to these characters. I think Ob is very interesting, I would like to delve more into the lore behind the Suqqusim. But I just passed the part where Reverend Martin dies and that kind of took the wind out of my sails. I guess I should have known they weren't all going to make it, and he was a pretty one dimensional character that had served his purpose. Anyway I did grab Ghoul and also another zombie duology he wrote. Based on your rec I think I'll get Urban Gothic too. Thanks.
>>
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Reading The Case of Charles Dexter Ward right now. Good shit.
>>
>>23816288
New
>>
>>23867635
>>23867635

New



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