Horror Novels/Short Stories: S/D

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Short Stories:
Lukundoo by Edward Lucas White
The Abyss by Leonid Andreyev
A Fragment of Fact by Chris Massie
The Unforgiven by Septimus Dale (anything by Septimus Dale for that matter)
The Very Silent Traveller by Paul Tabori
The Magic Shop by HG Wells
The Tell-tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe
The Hand by Guy de Maupassant

Fred (Fred), Monday, 24 May 2004 12:51 (twenty-one years ago)

Lukundoo by Edward Lucas White can be found here

Fred (Fred), Monday, 24 May 2004 12:56 (twenty-one years ago)

I enjoy a good horror story, but there are some images I don't really need in my head, and that's why I won't even proofread a John Saul book anymore. He's very popular, apparently, but you can't pay me to read him, literally.

Carol Robinson (carrobin), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 16:22 (twenty-one years ago)

technically a thrilla, but one of the spookiest books I've ever read...

DEVIL'S MIDNIGHT
Yuri Kapralov
Akashic Books
Akashic heavily edited this satanic thriller by Russian exile Yuri Kapralov, who took decades to write it in the first place. Credit the hard-won material, the refinement, or both--the effort's worth all the trees that were ripped down to print it. Set against the gruesome 1919 war between the Bolsheviks and the White Russians, the punchy Devil's Midnight barrels lucidly through nightmares with relentless narrative drive. The players here are mad locomotives and even madder drug-guzzling field commanders; witches searching for a meteorite on the orders of a quaint Russian devil called the Chort; and the dry, canny voice of irony that slips out in lines like "I have nothing against Satan or Samson. This is all a slight misunderstanding." The characters are vivid; even the femme fatale--actress Nata Tai, who is trained to serve the Chort but turns to killing witches--has a resonant, aching soul. As the strands of the narrative come together, it's clear that Nata and the Chort are the leads in a slick, dank tragedy that unfolds with unsettlingly deliberate power. Humans crazed by strain are terrifying to watch. But damn can some of them scrawl a warning. Next time, can we please keep the elections clean? After this, a civil war doesn't sound like any fun whatsoever. --Ann Sterzinger

Ann Sterzinger (Ann Sterzinger), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 18:44 (twenty-one years ago)

"Pickman's Model" by H.P. Lovecraft

"Manuscript Found In A Deserted House" by Robert Bloch

DV (dirtyvicar), Thursday, 27 May 2004 16:26 (twenty-one years ago)

It is Notebook Found in a Deserted House.
Search:
Dracula by Bram Stoker
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

Fred (Fred), Thursday, 27 May 2004 17:28 (twenty-one years ago)

I think Wuthering Heights belongs to this thread.

Fred (Fred), Thursday, 27 May 2004 17:30 (twenty-one years ago)

six years pass...

I've spent a lot of time this year burning through the supernatularist/horror/weird tale canon: Blackwood, Le Fanu, M.R. James, Hoffman, Kwaidan, etc.

I really love those stories where the otherworldly presence doesn't burst through and kill everyone so much as just sit there in full view, while the characters try to go about their business.(A number of the Mary E. Wilkins-Freeman stories are like this)

But I dunno, what's going on with contemporary horror? I know Ligotti. I've read a couple T.E.D. Klein novellas (one I liked; one I didn't), and really liked the one Ramsey Campbell short story I read ("The Brood"). The sci-fi and fantasy threads always seem to be cooking, and horror film always get a lot of talk. Where are my horror writing fans at?

CharlieS, Friday, 9 July 2010 19:26 (fifteen years ago)

I'm not in the loop the way I used to be, but I don't see a lot of contemporary horror as subtle and creepy as the canonic work you mention.

Recent nasty, ugly horror that I liked: The Passage by Justin Cronin -- overly long, not especially original, but better written and more affecting than I expected; Horns by Joe Hill -- a distinct improvement over his first novel, still working the same in-your-face vein as his daddy, but funnier and more vicious than recent King.

Brad C., Friday, 9 July 2010 20:07 (fifteen years ago)

Robert Aickman is the guy I'm always repping for - "ghost stories" more than horror, not always a whole lot happening but a really wicked vibe. Dennis Etchison also used to be a great horror short story writer, I think he moved on to movie novelizations.

les yeux sans aerosmith (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Friday, 9 July 2010 20:14 (fifteen years ago)

Haven't read much horror, and what I read was 10+ years ago, but, I thought I'd share a few links that I've been meaning to investigate if the damned mood for horror would just come creeping.
They're Halloween posts at the fantastic Victorianist blog The Little Professor, where she links to various appropriate stories:

*Victorian Terrors!
*Eeeeek! Halloween Horrors, 2007 edition
*Halloween Horrors, 2009: Inconveniently Active (And Otherwise Unpleasant) Artwork Edition

Øystein, Friday, 9 July 2010 21:28 (fifteen years ago)

anyone have any thoughts on Arthur Machen? better to start with his short stories or his novels?

prey like aretha franklin (sciolism), Saturday, 10 July 2010 01:51 (fifteen years ago)

The novellas "The Great God Pan" and "The White People" are usually mentioned as the big ones for Machen.

I'll second both Aickman and Etchison. Aickman is very tasteful and understated but relentlessly spooky. I'd almost forgotten about Etchison. I remember the SoCal settings of Darkside making the shouldn't-be-happening events extra creepy.

Brad C., Saturday, 10 July 2010 02:56 (fifteen years ago)

Machen wrote quite good stories throughout his life, but the concentration of his best material is early, from the 1880/90s: The Great God Pan, The White People, The Three Impostors (which is just a vehicle for some short stories, one of them terrible, one of the meh, two of them great - The Novel of the White Powder and the Novel of the Black Seal) and the Red Hand. If you like 'em, then it's worth checking out his other, later, stuff, which tends to be more supernal rather than infernal, and to deal with Graal legend.

The novels are not long, in fact don't really count as novels as such, more romances imo. The Hill of Dreams is fascinating, but not really horror novel/story material, more a proto-Ballardian portrait of psychic collapse and to a certain extent autobiographical.

Without at all wishing to push it on anybody (it's rather long), I did a piece last Hallowe'en on three very different ghost stories (MR James' Count Magnus, Rudyard Kipling's The End of the Passage, and Denton Welch's Ghosts, which if you are interesting you may find... interesting. It's here and I must admit I'm rather proud of its structure - it was damnable to compose.

GamalielRatsey, Saturday, 10 July 2010 18:15 (fifteen years ago)

Dance of the Dwarfs by Geoffrey Household.

alimosina, Sunday, 11 July 2010 01:13 (fifteen years ago)

Do not read it at night.

alimosina, Sunday, 11 July 2010 01:14 (fifteen years ago)

Our Lady of Darkness by Fritz Leiber has to be my favorite supernatural novel. I'd definitely second the recommendation on Aickman,. Faber have recently reprinted some of his collections, though you can still pick up decent second hand copies.

In terms of recent writers, I've been enjoying Reggie Oliver and Wilum Pugmire. There are quite a few other writers working in the subtle, creepy vein, but mostly in small presses. Check out Tartarus and Ash-Tree for starters.

Soukesian, Sunday, 11 July 2010 08:46 (fifteen years ago)

Thanks to Ann for the tip on Yuri Kapralov, who seems to have been an interesting guy - I'll have to check out his novels. The Russian theme reminds me to recommend Bruisov/ Bryusov's The Fiery Angel - more of a historical/occult novel than strictly horror, but an absolute classic. Paul Tabori is another name I don't know here who seems potentially interesting.

Soukesian, Sunday, 11 July 2010 09:01 (fifteen years ago)

^knew you'd come through^

was vaguely aware of Tartarus (through Wormwood), didn't know about Ash-Tree. Looks great.

All related google searches lead back to the ligotti page/forum- is that, like, the big place for the community?

I've read a story each by Aickman and Etchison. Great stuff!

That Cronin looks entertaining enough, but "overly long" sounds about right. Long horror novels are almost impossible for me to get through (GR's blog bits about ghosts not liking much exposure are key).

and fwiw ole Fred, I'd put Wuthering Heights in here as well.

CharlieS, Sunday, 11 July 2010 14:14 (fifteen years ago)

Thomas Ligotti Online seems to have become a major crossroads for genre fans - goes way beyond Ligotti's work, moderation is light-touch, but effective, and the interface is good. There are others - check out the Ramsey Campbell message board for one.

Soukesian, Sunday, 11 July 2010 14:35 (fifteen years ago)

six months pass...

ive been a p major horror kick lately & have gotten the impression that a lot of interesting stuff is coming out of 'literary' horror small presses but, considering how tedious this stuff can be to track down, i was hoping ilb wld have some suggestions

stuff that i have read lately and really loved:

chambers 'the king in yellow' collection
ligotti 'my work is not yet done' collection
lovecraft 'call of cthulu' collection
samuels 'the man who read machen & other stories'
golaski 'worse than myself' collection

im def attracted to the sort of atmospheric 'cosmic' horror that lovecraft occasionally does & that samuels collection in particular excels @. i also like how spare some of the newer horror seems to be ligotti in particular is just so lean which i really admire.

also really everyone shld give the chambers collection a try imo

Lamp, Sunday, 30 January 2011 20:45 (fourteen years ago)

There's a couple of anthologies I read recently which are especially good. Penguin's American Supernatural Fiction at the cheap end, and the Library of America's American Fantastic Tales set at the expensive...

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/P/0143105043.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/P/1598530593.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg

buildings with goats on the roof (James Morrison), Sunday, 30 January 2011 22:16 (fourteen years ago)

damn st joshi gets around huh

making the short collection introduction money

bet he has a p nice studio apt

Lamp, Sunday, 30 January 2011 22:26 (fourteen years ago)

still, would order

Lamp, Sunday, 30 January 2011 22:27 (fourteen years ago)

I liked that American Supernatural Tales collection a lot. bought the joshi edited Three Impostors and Other Stories collection this morning, along with a collection each of Ramsey Campbell and Edogawa Rampo.

those wordsworth tales of mystery & the supernatural editions are so cheap! real nice to have that around, cause I really can't drop $55 on a book. The Scottish Ghost Stories one came in the mail last week. It's been all good so far.

Anyone read Laird Barron?

this got posted everywhere last week, but in case anyone missed it, that Lovecraft documentary is up for free here: http://www.snagfilms.com/films/watch/lovecraft_fear_of_the_unknown/

CharlieS, Monday, 31 January 2011 02:46 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

Read F. Paul Wilson's "The Keep" a couple of weeks back. It's currently $3 at the barnes and noble nook store. A really well put together and imaginative novel. Wiki P says that he can get pretty libertarian, but I didn't really notice anything obvious while I was reading it. Can anyone recommend anything else by him? Anything I should avoid?

fruitsbs (beachville), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 12:02 (thirteen years ago)

The film version of The Keep, which is streaming on Netflix these days, is pretty awful.

fruitsbs (beachville), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 12:03 (thirteen years ago)

I am working my way through the Jeff and Ann Vandermeer edited short story collection "The Weird". The gang's all here.

The New Dirty Vicar, Tuesday, 24 April 2012 17:19 (thirteen years ago)

Yeah, that Vandermeer anthology looks amazing. Their website's got some neat stuff on it: http://weirdfictionreview.com/

I read a book of Horacio Quiroga stories a few months ago. Good, odd stuff.

CharlieS, Tuesday, 24 April 2012 20:56 (thirteen years ago)

two months pass...

I'm a bit late, but:

Anyone read Laird Barron?

Yes, yes, a thousand times YES. I'm halfway through The Imago Sequence now (OOP, but cheapish on Kindle) and it's wonderful; the best modern Lovecraftian horror I've ever read. He even does something I would have thought impossible and makes a straight-up homage to a classic HPL story ("Hallucigenia" is essentially "The Dunwich Horror") work.

muus lääv? :D muus dut :( (Telephone thing), Saturday, 30 June 2012 01:42 (thirteen years ago)

Yeah, I gotta check that out. I dug "The Men From Porlock", I think it was called, from some Lovecraftian anthology a few months ago.

Tore through a Vernon Lee anthology last summer. Loved that. Heard wonderful things about Glen Hirschberg's The Two Sams but couldn't stand it, only made it through a story and a half.

Buying a nook was almost worth it just to be able to read that Vandermeer Weird anthology without breaking my back. So much neat stuff in there. The G.R.R. Martin story was a surprise! Michael Shea's "The Autopsy", goddamn! Haven't read the Barron story yet.

CharlieS, Saturday, 30 June 2012 18:22 (thirteen years ago)

I keep meaning to pick up the Weird anthology- such an amazing lineup, and some really astute choices as well (I'm thinking of Kubin, Meyrink, Schulz, Cortazar, and Gahan Wilson especially). And I'm really looking forward to reading the Tiptree and Marc Laidlaw stories- the former because I keep hesitating before buying Her Smoke Rose Up Forever and the latter because he seems really well-regarded yet all of his books are out of print and I've only experienced his work writing for Valve games.

BTW, if you liked the excerpt from The Other Side, it's finally back in print as a Kindle ebook.

muus lääv? :D muus dut :( (Telephone thing), Saturday, 30 June 2012 21:57 (thirteen years ago)

Awesome, I loved that bit. Will check out.

CharlieS, Saturday, 30 June 2012 22:19 (thirteen years ago)

two years pass...

I just got a library card. Recommend some pop fiction creepitude - something that goes with late nights and chilly autumn weather. I've read loads of crime fiction and non-fiction, some creepy sci-fi, I like seventies pop lit a lot. What is good creep-reading, and not TOO "literary"?? I'm not trying to pass an English lit test here...

Thanks in advance!

Opus Gai (I M Losted), Tuesday, 16 September 2014 22:37 (ten years ago)

For example, I am def going to check out "Devil's Midnight". If someone has it. I like Satan and witches!

Opus Gai (I M Losted), Tuesday, 16 September 2014 22:39 (ten years ago)

First off - Ray Bradbury, The October Country. I always pull it out when the air gets like this.

arthur treacher, or the fall of the british empire (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 16 September 2014 23:01 (ten years ago)

one month passes...

Picked up the October Country! Amazing how unnerving the stories are without actually having a lot of horror on the surface. Like the one about the hypochondriac who "realizes" he has a skeleton inside his body, how he loses his mind obsessing about skeletons as separate entities living inside us. He stops eating food with calcium to try and starve his :O

The cover art is amazing! Anyway I started it a few weeks ago but read infrequently cause it gets under your skin so well.

hobbes, Tuesday, 21 October 2014 06:25 (ten years ago)

The Scythe is the one that gets me.

koogs, Tuesday, 21 October 2014 09:53 (ten years ago)

Some horror discussed and linked on Rolling Science Fiction Fantasy & Speculative Fiction: for instance, try this vintage Richard Matheson---you have to click to magnify, but works fine---then brace yerself:

http://magicmonkeyboy.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/drink-my-red-blood-by-richard-matheson.html

dow, Tuesday, 21 October 2014 13:17 (ten years ago)

That was great!

carl agatha, Tuesday, 21 October 2014 13:42 (ten years ago)

I love October Country! I'm starting to read some of Caitlin Kiernan's early short stories in Tales of Pain and Wonder mostly because I want to see how she deals with gender and body horror--the earliest stories still feel like they're trying too hard to be unsettling, but I like her oblique plotting, and I've heard good things about her recent novel The Drowning Girl.

one way street, Tuesday, 21 October 2014 15:06 (ten years ago)

"The Emissary" really gave me the creeps as a kid. Still does tbh.

JoeStork, Tuesday, 21 October 2014 15:41 (ten years ago)

I just finished the novel I was reading so there's still time for me to read a couple October Country pieces within the month of October, as is my practice.

a drug by the name of WORLD WITHOUT END (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 21 October 2014 22:15 (ten years ago)

"The Emissary" really gave me the creeps as a kid. Still does tbh.

i read this one for the first time as a college student sitting alone in a near-deserted library and it still terrified me.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 21 October 2014 23:36 (ten years ago)

one year passes...

enjoying this. almost done. anyone read anything by steve tem? or his wife? or the both of them together? she died this year. rest in peace, melanie tem. also, i hate to think this way, but deadfall hotel would make a super t.v. series if done right. i don't ever really read horror/weird fiction anymore. glad i read this though. would read more by him. this book is a mix of every kinda thing. horror/supernatural/weird/fairy tale.

http://horrornovelreviews.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/deadfallhotel.jpg

scott seward, Friday, 18 December 2015 13:11 (nine years ago)

I liked Tem's novel Excavation, though I remember thinking it felt like the work of a short story writer going long. Good writing, realistic rural setting, sustained slow-building creepiness.

Also suitable for this thread: I don't know how I missed William Sloane's The Edge of Running Water (1939) for so long. It's exactly the sort of mad scientist story you'd expect to have been made into a Karloff movie, but the book is quite a bit weirder and more dreadful than I expected. Slick rather than pulpy prose keeps you wondering if the story will turn toward mystery or SF or horror. It's set in Maine and some scenes are Stephen King avant la lettre.

Brad C., Friday, 18 December 2015 14:27 (nine years ago)

Deadfall is kinda broken up into novellas based on the seasons at the hotel. but there is a common thread/characters.

scott seward, Friday, 18 December 2015 15:56 (nine years ago)

this may be old news, but a bunch of Michael McDowell's novels are now available on Amazon thanks to Valancourt Books. I'd recommend The Elementals, which is sort of like Solaris reimagined as a southern gothic family drama: a Victorian beach house is haunted by the dead relatives of a wealthy Alabama clan, but it's unclear if the apparitions are sentient or if they're sand gollums assembled by a non-human entity to torment the family with memories of their oppressive former matriarch. he has a knack for dysfunctional family dynamics (using the supernatural to awaken and complicate old jealousies/feuds) though he occasionally veers into soap opera melodramatics. I'm making my way through his 6-volume Blackwater series now.

he churned out close to 30 novels in the '80s, but a lot of them are regarded as hackwork and will probably never be reprinted; he was quoted as saying, "I would be perfectly willing if a publisher came up to me and said, 'I need a novel about underwater Nazi cheerleaders and it has to be 309 pages long and I need fourteen chapters and a prologue.'" he's best know today for writing the original screenplay for Beetlejuice, which started off as some dark twisted Clive Barker shit until Tim Burton turned it into a comedy.

small doug yule carnival club (unregistered), Saturday, 19 December 2015 00:26 (nine years ago)

how Lovecraftian is that Steve Rasnic Tem novel? I'm vaguely aware of him as a 'new weird' writer along the lines of Laird Barron, but maybe I have the wrong impression.

small doug yule carnival club (unregistered), Saturday, 19 December 2015 00:32 (nine years ago)

Valancourt do have a very interesting catalogue - a mix of gothic, gay, horror and mid-20th-century neglected literary novels

as verbose and purple as a Peter Ustinov made of plums (James Morrison), Saturday, 19 December 2015 01:42 (nine years ago)

For anyone who's interested, here's a list of various online short story publications with at least a partial focus on horror:

Nightmare - http://www.nightmare-magazine.com
The Dark - http://thedarkmagazine.com
The Deadlands - https://thedeadlands.com/
Gamut - https://houseofgamut.com/
Apex - http://www.apex-magazine.com/
Seize The Press - https://www.seizethepress.com
Cosmic Horror Monthly - https://cosmichorrormonthly.com
Skull and Laurel - https://tenebrouspress.com/
Ergot - https://www.ergot.press
The Drabblecast - http://www.drabblecast.org
Weird Horror - https://undertowpublications.com
Pseudopod - http://pseudopod.org
Tales to Terrify - https://talestoterrify.com/

carry on columbine (Matt #2), Sunday, 25 August 2024 20:04 (one year ago)

I've definitely read a few horror short stories where it feels like an overt supernatural element was tacked on.

I don't think I've encountered this, but it sounds like an interesting switch from the "explained supernatural" endings of Radcliffe, old dark house mysteries, Scooby Doo, etc.

Brad C., Sunday, 25 August 2024 20:18 (one year ago)

Haven't read xxxpost Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House, though I liked the movie. and expect the novel might be better, not just because they often are, with the suthor's voice and more room for detail etc, but also because I have read her We Have Always Lived Lived in the Castle, the edition with Jonathan Lethem's afterword, to which I enjoyed comparing mu own cold-read impressions (there should be more afterwords ). Awesome book, and short enough to have the tightness and impact of first-rate short stories, with room enough for more headsnaps. It's their house and they live there.

dow, Sunday, 25 August 2024 20:41 (one year ago)

Yeah We Have Always Lived in the Castle is great, one of my favorite unreliable-narrator stories.

Blitz Primary (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 25 August 2024 22:01 (one year ago)

Then there's this.from Rolling Speculative---the first comment is mine:

Also Richard Matheson, who wrote a lot of the best Twilight Zones, Speilberg's Duel, Kolchak: The Night Stalker, which Chris Carter credited with inspiring him to create The X-Files, also novels like The Shrinking Man and I Am Legend, which could be an ancestor of Breaking Bad, with the one Normal terrorizing a world of vampires, although in his mind, of course, he's Making Good. Also lots of short stories---Ward Fowler scared the crap out of me by posting this 'un on the old Rolling sf etc. thread:

http://magicmonkeyboy.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/drink-my-red-blood-by-richard-matheson.html

my fave matheson short story, which deeply affected horror-obsessed-young-me when i read it as a boy. the whole treatment of vampirism seems very similar to the vibe that george a romero was going for w/ his movie martin, and i know romero admitted that matheson was the primary inspiration behind NOTLD. you can see why stephen king is such a big matheson fan, too - that 'naturalistic'/everyday treatment of the supernatural. again, this story reminds me v much of parts of the tobe hooper tv movie of salem's lot - vampirism as teenage yearning/disaffection

― Ward Fowler, Sunday, September 9, 2012

dow, Sunday, 25 August 2024 23:15 (one year ago)

https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/740011/capitalism-a-horror-story-by-jon-greenaway/

It’s theory not a horror novel itself but this is good and there are good recs in there.

treeship 2, Sunday, 25 August 2024 23:21 (one year ago)

Just read a Matheson short story collection a few months ago, dude was fucked up

brimstead, Sunday, 25 August 2024 23:35 (one year ago)

Thx treeship, that looks like a good read.

Blitz Primary (tipsy mothra), Monday, 26 August 2024 01:00 (one year ago)

I picked up a Robert Aickman short story collection from the local bookshop a few weeks ago. It had one of those staff recommendation blurbs and a cover description that made it seem up my street, but I ended up feeling a bit bored with it and ultimately missold, like yeah the stories are a bit 'weird' but they are slow and often vague and don't impart enough creepiness or dread or unease for me.

The most unsettled I felt was when I went to shelve the book and saw that I already own another Aickman collection that I have absolutely no memory of purchasing, which is super unusual for me because With almost all of my other books I remember why or where or when I got them, but the circumstances of this one are a total mystery to me. A bookmark a couple stories in suggests past me didn't really get on with him either.

salsa shark, Friday, 30 August 2024 16:39 (one year ago)

I recently read my first Daphne Du Maurier, Don't Look Now, AKA Not After Midnight: long stories, but didn't seem too slow or vague, def got creepiness, dread, unease.

dow, Friday, 30 August 2024 20:08 (one year ago)

Re-titled Don't Look Now, at least for US, after the movie came out.

dow, Friday, 30 August 2024 20:10 (one year ago)

Aickman rules. 'Swords' is one of the most disturbing stories I've ever read.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Friday, 30 August 2024 20:34 (one year ago)

The Aickman anecdote about not realising you already had an Aickman collection is quite Aickman-esque, one of his lesser tales maybe.

the deep cut is the firstest (Matt #2), Saturday, 31 August 2024 00:04 (eleven months ago)

What the fuck, I also bought an Aickman collection this week (but I knew I already had one.) Which has "The Swords" in it. Fucking amazing and awful.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 31 August 2024 02:42 (eleven months ago)

there is a new stephen king story collection with previously unpublished stories including a post-pandemic cujo-related novella!

also this:

"Paying tribute to author Cormac McCarthy upon his death in June 2023, King previewed The Dreamers, a story he had written while reading McCarthy's 2022 book The Passenger. He described The Dreamers as "very much under the influence of McCarthy's prose" and "very much in McCarthy's style". In August 2023, King noted The Dreamers as a rare example of one of his stories that he himself was scared by, describing it as "so creepy" that he "couldn't think about it at night". The Dreamers was published in 2024 as part of King's collection You Like It Darker. The story was dedicated to McCarthy, and to the fantasy author Evangeline Walton."

scott seward, Saturday, 31 August 2024 02:47 (eleven months ago)

i haven't read king in decades though...

scott seward, Saturday, 31 August 2024 02:47 (eleven months ago)

i have a nice first edition of this and i still haven't read it.

https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81j72EuMubL._AC_UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg

scott seward, Saturday, 31 August 2024 02:49 (eleven months ago)

aickman had a good look.

https://blogs.bl.uk/.a/6a00d8341c464853ef02a30d444d9a200b-pi

scott seward, Saturday, 31 August 2024 02:50 (eleven months ago)

The Aickman anecdote about not realising you already had an Aickman collection is quite Aickman-esque, one of his lesser tales maybe.

And one of the more concise and clear ones, yes.

Neither of my collections have Swords. I feel left out!

salsa shark, Saturday, 31 August 2024 09:03 (eleven months ago)

I really enjoyed 3 of the 4 Aickman stories I've read but never felt compelled to bump him up the to-be-read pile, just someone I hope to read more of eventually. His body of work has a sparkling reputation for consistency, being able to keep exploring the same obsessions with novelty and freshness (or so I hear)

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 31 August 2024 20:07 (eleven months ago)

New Laird Barron is good. Thematically / stylistically closer to Swift To The Chase and with some recurring characters so YMMV if you strongly preferred the first two collections. Still a cut above everyone else in his field.

ShariVari, Friday, 13 September 2024 11:28 (eleven months ago)

one month passes...

was just checking my wishlist and was pleasantly surprised to see those aickman compilations are currently discounted on Amazon in the uk (amz has Unsettled Dust and Wine Dark Sea for 99p and Cold Hand In Mine and Dark Entries for 1.79, Kobo has just the first two)

koogs, Thursday, 17 October 2024 00:19 (ten months ago)

five months pass...

In addition to Mariana Enriquez's stories mentioned on the WAYR thread, I recently finished A Different Darkness by Luigi Musolino, disturbing chthonic folk horror stories in modern settings from Italy.

It was so good. SO GOOD. Properly macabre and unsettling and atmospheric and weird.

salsa shark, Friday, 11 April 2025 10:31 (four months ago)

Yep, Valancourt have been strong on translated horror recently. Attila Veres’ Black Maybe also very good.

ShariVari, Friday, 11 April 2025 19:50 (four months ago)

A Different Darkness is probably the most horrific horror I've read since the Black Maybe a few years ago. I think Veres was more disturbing overall but Musolino has the better stories.

salsa shark, Friday, 11 April 2025 20:36 (four months ago)

I’m really into Clive Barker right now. Read The Damnation Game last month (feverish, depraved, slightly campy) and am enjoying Books of Blood right now. It’s so fucked up, I love it.

brimstead, Friday, 11 April 2025 21:08 (four months ago)

Any good recommendations for literary horror with not too much reliance on gore or monsters? Well written madness (or gaslighting), architectural horror, ghosts/hauntings, nature horror, being lost or alone in either vast or tiny places, the real horror is society etc etc. I've read a lot of old classics but am totally not up to date on anything modern aside from a bit of Ligotti.

The Musolino sounds interesting, but 'most horrific horror' might indicate a bit too much splatteriness? I have also read a bit of Enriquez but while I liked it I didn't love it.

emil.y, Friday, 11 April 2025 21:48 (four months ago)

https://www.fantasticfiction.com/a/sofia-ajram/coup-de-grace.htm

I haven't read this yet but it seems to have the labyrinth quality and a bewildering number of writers have given it praise. It looks very short too.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 11 April 2025 22:28 (four months ago)

Jon Padgett's 'The Secret of Ventriloquism' might be up your alley: https://jonpadgett.net/?page_id=3276

Knife fight at the Optimists Club (atonar), Friday, 11 April 2025 22:40 (four months ago)

+1 on Padgett

I don’t think the Musolino is very gory.

Huge, huge fan of the Broodcomb Press books, particularly R. Ostermeier’s short stories.

ShariVari, Saturday, 12 April 2025 07:16 (four months ago)

Slade House is the only thing I've read recently that might qualify. and those Aickman shorts.

koogs, Saturday, 12 April 2025 11:53 (four months ago)

Thanks for the recs, I shall investigate.

emil.y, Saturday, 12 April 2025 12:28 (four months ago)

The quality of Ramsey Campbell's fiction tends to be obscured by the King-like number of titles he's produced, but he is a master of the genre who can frighten with or without gore and monsters. Alone with the Horrors is a good place to start with his short fiction, his greatest strength. I've enjoyed many of his novels too; Ancient Images and The Darkest Part of the Woods come to mind as slow-burn books that might fit the brief.

Brad C., Saturday, 12 April 2025 14:49 (four months ago)

Assuming you haven't read it, emil.y, I honestly think House of Leaves covers most of those categories! Other than that, Robert Aickman and M.R James.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Saturday, 12 April 2025 15:34 (four months ago)

emil.y are you into Karin Tidbeck at all? they kinda lean more into fantasy/scifi but I had to stop reading Jagannath because it was giving me the creeps lol.

brimstead, Saturday, 12 April 2025 15:41 (four months ago)

Ahahaha, I was a teenage House of Leaves stan, Chinaski. Always thought the Johnny Truant bits were a bit cringe but LOVED the rest of it. It absolutely does appeal to so much of what I like, yep - textual experimentation, spooky architecture, weird academics, 'what if Borges but genre fiction', yes yes yes.

The blurb for Coup de Grace mentions both Danielewski and Susanna Clarke, which helped interest me, even though when I recently gave Piranesi a try I found it decent but underwhelming - the concept of it is brilliant, so anything similar but better would be perfect.

emil.y, Saturday, 12 April 2025 16:51 (four months ago)

Brimstead, I don't think I've even heard of Karin Tidbeck but scary sci-fi is very welcome. Also Ursula K. Le Guin rates it so definitely worth a try.

emil.y, Saturday, 12 April 2025 16:52 (four months ago)

Hahaha - I was thinking you *must* have read it with that set of parameters! I've softened on the Truant stuff but know exactly what you mean. I've yet to find a book close to what Danielewski managed, conceptually and emotionally, keeping an eye on the thread for sure.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Saturday, 12 April 2025 17:07 (four months ago)

emil.y do you know Brian Evenson at all? I can't recommend anything specific other than short stories I've chanced across online, but what I've read of him would tick all your boxes I think.

prog is the sound of the suburbs (Matt #2), Saturday, 12 April 2025 19:10 (four months ago)

The name rings a very vague bell but I'm pretty sure I haven't read any of his work - will have a look.

emil.y, Saturday, 12 April 2025 21:07 (four months ago)

https://www.freesfonline.net/authors/Brian_Evenson.html

Good site to find online story links in general!

prog is the sound of the suburbs (Matt #2), Saturday, 12 April 2025 22:42 (four months ago)

Oh wow, great resource, thank you!

emil.y, Sunday, 13 April 2025 13:03 (four months ago)

Intan Paramaditha's Apple and Knife fits into post-The Bloody Chamber folk horror with some Enriquez parallels. I need to check out Tidbeck!

Intan Paramaditha - APPLE AND KNIFE

collection of short stories set in Indonesia, some based on Indonesian folk tales. A couple of weak ones but also a couple that I think will stay with me a v long time.

― oscar bravo, Monday, December 19, 2022 9:09 PM (two years ago

etc, Monday, 14 April 2025 23:03 (four months ago)

I liked that Tidbeck collection but I thought it leaned more toward surreal grossness than traditional horror stuff (although it does have that too). Or at least the stories that made a lasting impression, like the title story and "Aunts". The praise at the time was a bit over the top but it's a good collection.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Monday, 14 April 2025 23:27 (four months ago)

Have only read the first story in the Musolino collection. While I intend to read the rest I feel something is off in the language. It comes across as a little amateurish in spots and I’m going to ascribe that to the translation. I’ll bet anything this reads miles better in the original Italian.

completely suited to the horny decadence (Capitaine Jay Vee), Tuesday, 15 April 2025 14:00 (four months ago)

emil.y, I haven't read him myself but the English horror writer Adam Nevill might fit yr criteria. And a couple of classics in case you haven't read them - The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson, and Ghost Story by Peter Straub.

I suspect most Aickman fans have a notional top ten and that few of them are identical, but I bet 'The Swords' would be in most of them. Along with, for me, 'The Hospice', 'Bind Your Hair', 'Into the Wood', 'Meeting Mr Millar', 'The Stains', 'The School Friend', 'The Trains', 'The Visiting Star', 'The Same Dog' and 'Ringing the Changes'. Today at any rate.

Ward Fowler, Tuesday, 15 April 2025 14:26 (four months ago)

Difficult to argue with that list Ward. I'd probably include 'The Unsettled Dust'. 'The Swords' is about as disturbing a story as I've read. Magnificently fucking weird and ugly.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Tuesday, 15 April 2025 15:36 (four months ago)

Ward is also otm about Jackson and Straub

Brad C., Tuesday, 15 April 2025 16:58 (four months ago)

Anyone familiar with this "Ultimate, Final Vampire Novel" being reissued later this year by McNally Editions. From the author of Brand New Cherry Flavor.

https://www.mcnallyeditions.com/books/p/stainless

gjoon1, Tuesday, 15 April 2025 23:11 (four months ago)

Big surprise: E H visiak's Medusa just got released by British Library, it's been a collector's item forever and now it's cheap. I wish this happened more often, I really hate it when a rare book only gets reprinted as a collector's item. I've heard some say it's really overrated but at least I can find out for myself now.

The rare novels of David Lindsay would be appreciated.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 17 April 2025 20:34 (four months ago)


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