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July 2025 - How many?

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    July 2025 - How many?

    Only finished one book in July, as most of the month was spent rereading The Stand (which is still ongoing).

    1. Grendel and Other Creatures From the Dark was a collection of 16 supernatural stories by horror veteran Tony Richards. The highlight of the collection was the closing novella, ‘Mr. Jake’s’, where a frustrated author takes up residence in a luxury hotel in a small English town, trying to recreate the success of his first novel. While there, all his needs are met beyond expectations, but he eventually finds out there is a price to pay for his pampered life at the hotel. Other stand outs were ‘The People in the Glass’ and ‘27 Falsham Street’, both of the traditional ghost story variety that Richards short fiction tends to be known for, ‘The Younger One’, a modern follow up on Frankenstein, and ‘Prowl’, which definitely had a Whitley Strieber The Wolfen vibe to it. For the rest of the stories in this collection, they weren’t bad, just not really memorable. Overall I thought Grendel was a good collection, though not Richards’ best.
    3.6 / 5

    #2
    I read 27 books in July:


    Young Avengers by Heinberg & Cheung Omnibus (8)
    Skinner (6) Supernatural slasher/survival-horror graphic novel that didn't quite hit the mark.
    The Marvel Comics Covers of Jack Kirby, Volume 1: 1961-1964 (9)
    In Search of Real Monsters: Adventures in Cryptozoology, Volume II (5) Fascinating stuff, but too much blow-by-blow travelogue and too many repetitive witness interviews.
    Marjorie Finnegan, Temporal Criminal Deluxe Edition (8)
    BFI Film Classics: Die Hard (6)
    Husks, by Glen Krisch (1)
    The Joker: The Bronze Age Omnibus (8)
    Superman: Space Age (7)
    Batman: Dark Age (9)
    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: 40th Anniversary Comics Celebration- The Deluxe Edition (8)
    The Immortal Hulk, Vol. 10: Of Hell and Death (2)
    The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library, Volume 24: Walt Disney’s Uncle Scrooge: “Island in the Sky” (9)
    The Autumn Springs Retirement Home Massacre, by Phillip Fracassi (8) I had a blast with this book. The killer's identity was obvious from the get-go, but the characters really won me over.
    Harrow County, Volume 7: Dark Times A’Coming (8)
    Incident On and Off a Mountain Road, by Joe R. Lansdale (9) Illustrated hardcover version of the short story. A nice production, but the typos and production errors really made it hard to enjoy.
    Shivers: The Indigo Room, by Stephen Graham Jones (4) I have come to the conclusion that Jones' work is just not for me. I have yet to enjoy anything of his that I've read.
    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Volume One: Return To New York (9)
    Shivers: Night and Day in Misery, by Catriona Ward (7) My first Ward. Well-written, but I have very little tolerance for grief-porn horror, so I'm not sure if I'd seek her out again.
    American Gods, Volume 2: My Ainsel (9) Graphic novel adaptation of Gaiman's novel.
    Shivers: Letter Slot, by Owen King (9) Man, Owen King needs to write more horror. This was the best of the bunch in the Amazon Shivers collection.
    Superman- Final Crisis: Legion of Three Worlds: The Deluxe Edition (8)
    Moonshine, Volume 4: Angels Share (7)
    Hate revisited! (9)
    Shivers: Jackknife, by Joe Hill (7) Disjointed monster tale with too many disparate threads dangling throughout the story. Fun, but a missed opportunity.
    Shivers: The Blanks, by Grady Hendrix (8) This could easily have been expanded into a novel. Great premise.
    Wolverine vs. The Punisher (8)


    Last edited by dannyboy121070; Yesterday, 03:14 PM.
    http://thecrabbyreviewer.blogspot.com/

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      #3
      I only read one in July: a reread of A Head Full of Ghosts by Paul Tremblay. I was through the first third of The Black Dahlia by Ellroy when my wife started Ghosts (her first time reading it) and I thought it would be fun to read it together. Knowing where the book goes the second time around takes a little bit of the wind out of the book's sails, but not much. Merry's narration wore on me a little more this time around, but I still found the story very intriguing. I have more Tremblay in the TBR, but I kinda stalled out after Disappearance at Devil's Rock, which I found to be kinda plodding and doesn't really go anywhere. Overall, I'd give Ghosts an 8.5 out of 10.

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