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  • brlesh
    replied
    Originally posted by Martin View Post

    I agree with your assessment of Billy Summers. I also think the ties to prior stories was done on the context as the current story. Sometimes he throws in links that have no bearing on the story being told. That was not the case here.
    I go into every King book any more wondering if he’s got one more great one in him.

    For me, Billy Summers was his next great book.

    Certainly my favorite going back 15 years (Duma Key), arguably his best in the last 25 years (circa late 90’s Green Mile & Wizard and Glass).

    Let the count down start again with Fairy Tale.

    B

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  • RonClinton
    replied
    Thanks for the BLIND VOICES review…glad to hear you generally enjoyed it, and as such I’ll bump it up a bit on the TBR plan. I bought it because of its Bradburyesque carnival, pastoral setting and its positive reputation. But it does have its detractors, and I began to wonder if its positive reputation was based more on the special circumstances of its author — only novel, published posthumously — than the work itself. Good to hear my concerns were unfounded, and am looking forward to diving in.

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  • sholloman81
    replied
    Originally posted by RonClinton View Post

    Glad you enjoyed BILLY SUMMERS much more than I did. Very much looking forward to your take on BLIND VOICES...I've had the S/L HC from PS in my TBR for a long time, but haven't cracked its spine yet.
    Just finished "Blind Voices" by Tom Reamy. Really enjoyed it and can see why it gets the Bradbury/Something Wicked comparisons as it shares most of the same ingredients; however, I feel like Reamy went much darker with his story. There were some horror scenes in this book that I just wasn't expecting and landed quite hard after the pastoral build-up of the first quarter of the book. I also liked that Reamy funneled his story through three young women rather than young boys as Bradbury did. Kept it feeling fresh. I was also a bit shocked at some of the sex scenes/implications in this book. Not that they were especially graphic or anything, I just wasn't expecting them in this sort of story so they landed quite hard as well. While I did enjoy the book, it wasn't quite as perfect (imo) as Something Wicked. There were a few words that were repeated a few times throughout the book and stuck out quite a bit such as phantasmagorical and akimbo. Also, there was one especially shocking scene/plot point, and while it made sense plot wise, the other characters reaction to it in the story felt very inauthentic, especially for the time-period this was set as well as it being set in a small town. That being said, I pretty much loved everything else and am glad to have read/own this.

    Think I will be reading Don Winslow's "City of Fire" next. Winslow just might be my favorite (alive) crime writer today and I can't wait to dig into this one!
    Last edited by sholloman81; 08-01-2022, 06:35 PM.

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  • RonClinton
    replied
    Starting UPGRADE by Blake Crouch, the signed and numbered Goldsboro UK HC.

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  • dannyboy121070
    replied
    Originally posted by Sock Monkey View Post

    Cool. Thanks! I’ve put this in my “need to buy” list.
    I hope you enjoy it as much as I did, Sock!

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