Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

What are you currently reading?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Finished up Mystery Walk, which seems to be one of the lesser talked about novels by Robert McCammon.

    While not my favorite thing from McCammon, I liked Mystery Walk quite a bit. As usual with McCammon there was great character development and excellent story pacing. Upon completing the book, I’m a little surprised that this is a story that McCammon hasn’t gone back to.

    My one complaint about the story is I thought the supernatural elements could have used a bit more exposition.

    Up next, probably starting Lost Man’s Lane by Scott Carson.

    B

    Comment


      I decided to postpone my planned Bernard Taylor, as I was unwilling to stop reading short stories in favor of a novel, so I started Neil Gaiman's TRIGGER WARNING, which I'm enjoying very much.
      http://thecrabbyreviewer.blogspot.com/

      Comment


        Originally posted by brlesh View Post
        Finished up Mystery Walk, which seems to be one of the lesser talked about novels by Robert McCammon.

        While not my favorite thing from McCammon, I liked Mystery Walk quite a bit. As usual with McCammon there was great character development and excellent story pacing. Upon completing the book, I’m a little surprised that this is a story that McCammon hasn’t gone back to.

        My one complaint about the story is I thought the supernatural elements could have used a bit more exposition.

        Up next, probably starting Lost Man’s Lane by Scott Carson.

        B
        Loved Los Man's Lane! Hope you enjoy it as well!

        Comment


          Originally posted by sholloman81 View Post

          Loved Los Man's Lane! Hope you enjoy it as well!
          I read it last year on a roundtrip air flight, and enjoyed it. I haven't read a lot of Carson / Koryta -- maybe three or four total, under both names, and this one was probably my favorite. I'm a bit lukewarm on his stuff -- of, again, what little I've read -- so that's not an especially high bar, I suppose, but I'd certainly recommend LOST MAN'S LANE without reservation. I thought the plotting was tight, the coming-of-age theme well handled, and the characters drawn nicely. It was enjoyable enough that it's made me take a second look at his others, too, like THE CHILL, etc...I haven't yet, but I'm pretty confident I will at some point soon.
          Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_clinton

          Comment


            Originally posted by RonClinton View Post

            I read it last year on a roundtrip air flight, and enjoyed it. I haven't read a lot of Carson / Koryta -- maybe three or four total, under both names, and this one was probably my favorite. I'm a bit lukewarm on his stuff -- of, again, what little I've read -- so that's not an especially high bar, I suppose, but I'd certainly recommend LOST MAN'S LANE without reservation. I thought the plotting was tight, the coming-of-age theme well handled, and the characters drawn nicely. It was enjoyable enough that it's made me take a second look at his others, too, like THE CHILL, etc...I haven't yet, but I'm pretty confident I will at some point soon.
            I love Korta's stuff but was have been lukewarm on his stuff as Scott Carson until Lost Man's Lane.

            Comment


              Just finished reading the SST LE of Stephen Graham Jones' "The Angel of Indian Lake". Man did I love this series! So many fun slasher references and troupes, and the character work is beyond top-notch. I know I'll remember the main character Jade forever. Sad to see the series end but can't wait to see what Jones does next as he has been on a real run of great books IMO.

              Am now reading the Thunderstorm LE of Hailey Piper's," Cruel Angels Past Sundown", part of the Splatter Western series.

              Comment


                Getting a little bored with the modern noir I'm reading, so will likely speed-read through the second half and start a new one. Thinking of plucking WE SPREAD by Iain Reid (author of I'M THINKING OF ENDING THINGS and FOE, the latter of which I haven't read) out of the TBR pile.
                Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_clinton

                Comment


                  Finished up Lost Man’s Lane by Scott Carson, which I thought was great. A 500 page story that had me invested in it from the first page until the last.

                  After Lost Man’s Lane I read the latest chapbook combo from Rapture Publishing.

                  The Servitor by Philip Fracassi and Axum by Tyler Jones.

                  I enjoyed both stories and the short followup stories that each author wrote for the other. Both stories had a very Indiana Jones feel to them and were a lot of fun.

                  Up next, probably finish American Cannibal, the anthology I started a couple of weeks ago.

                  B

                  Comment


                    Just finished reading the Thunderstorm LE of Hailey Piper's," Cruel Angels Past Sundown", part of the Splatter Western series. I had mixed feelings about this one. There were elements that I enjoyed such as the religious aspect, which added a real weirdness to the plot, as well as some of the horror set pieces, but I also felt that there was something missing throughout the story. There was also a lot of repetitiveness with the main character's dialogue as well as a general unlikability to the character herself. Overall, I would give this one a C+.

                    Am now reading Kristopher Triana's "Pure Evil", a collection of his most extreme short stories. Buckling up my seatbelt for this one...

                    Comment


                      In a quest to satisfy my mania to read nothing but short story collections, I started Kenzie Jennings' ALWAYS LISTEN TO HER HURT last night. Too soon to say if I like it or not, but I'm hoping all of the good things I've read about her work are true...I haven't had a good track record lately with new-to-me Horror writers.
                      http://thecrabbyreviewer.blogspot.com/

                      Comment


                        Will finish up WE SPREAD by Iain Reid this evening, and suspect I'll be left with the feeling I had with I'M THINKING OF ENDING THINGS -- that I appreciate the amorphous weirdness he aims for, and there are some nice scene nuggets within, but ultimately it feels a little unsubstantial, a bit unfinished, a little too opaque. If I inquired of the author, he'd probably say that's what he's going for in his work -- if so, then mission accomplished. That type of approach perhaps worked better for me back a couple decades ago...these days I don't seem to have quite the patience for it in print fiction unless it's immensely well done, and for me, Reid isn't at that level. But we'll see, I still have about a third of the book to go, though it's a quick read.

                        After this one, not sure...thinking of tackling Joe Hill's KING SORROW. I figure it's probably the polar opposite of "opaque", which will be a welcome change after WE SPREAD. Gotta say, though, these doorstop books just aren't my jam anymore, but it's gotta be done, so no better time than the present.
                        Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_clinton

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by RonClinton View Post
                          After this one, not sure...thinking of tackling Joe Hill's KING SORROW. I figure it's probably the polar opposite of "opaque", which will be a welcome change after WE SPREAD. Gotta say, though, these doorstop books just aren't my jam anymore, but it's gotta be done, so no better time than the present.
                          KING SORROW wasn't my favorite Hill book, but it was well-written and his style is so readable that I blew through it pretty quickly.

                          http://thecrabbyreviewer.blogspot.com/

                          Comment


                            May have taken me almost all of January, but yesterday I finished Joe Hill's King Sorrow.

                            I gave it 4.5 stars (I think - yesterday was a long time ago.) While I enjoyed it, my only real issue (other than the length maybe - this thing was a beast!) was the characters. I never really cheered for any of them and didn't find any of them redeemable or worth cheering for.

                            Next book, which I read one chapter last night, is SA Cosby's King of Ashes (continuing the King theme . . .)

                            Comment


                              If anyone needs the new $640 signed/limited from Folio Society of AMERICAN PSYCHO, you'd best hurry...at this writing, there're only 188 copies left of the 750 run:

                              https://www.foliosociety.com/usa/ame...imited-edition

                              For me, my signed Easton HC will do just fine, particularly at that $640 price point.
                              Twitter: https://twitter.com/ron_clinton

                              Comment


                                Originally posted by RonClinton View Post
                                If anyone needs the new $640 signed/limited from Folio Society of AMERICAN PSYCHO, you'd best hurry...at this writing, there're only 188 copies left of the 750 run:

                                https://www.foliosociety.com/usa/ame...imited-edition

                                For me, my signed Easton HC will do just fine, particularly at that $640 price point.
                                Would love a copy, but not at that price!

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X