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Top Horror Books
- Matt Thrower
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- Shiny Balls
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Mine are mainly short story collections. It seems to lend itself well to the medium. Best of all are the works of M.R. James, a Victorian academic who pretty much put down all the conventions we follow today. The Ash-Tree, Count Magnus and the Mezzotint are particularly good. I think all his stories are available free online if you look - they're out of copyright.
Then there's Lovecraft of course. I always thought he was overrated as a horror author - his stories work better as weird fantasy. The whole cosmic nihilism effect he was aiming for is a tough thing to get right. But in Rats in the Walls, The Call of Cthulhu and his finest work, The Colour Out of Space, he got there to chilling effect.
Ramsey Campbell started out his career emulating Lovecraft. His collection of mythos influenced short stories, Cold Print, is a fascinating arc of his development as an author. Toward the end he adopted a dreamlike, almost psychedelic style which arguably did better at achieving Lovecraft's aims than his inspiration.
In terms of novels, I've found pickings to be much slimmer. A lot of modern horror novels are just tiresome pulp rubbish. Older classics are great reads but not scary. Stephen King is the master of that form, but even he has trouble. The Shining and Salem's Lot are the best I've read. But I'm sure you all know that already.
One you might not have heard of is Dark Matter. The story of a haunting in an isolated Arctic outpost, it uses the dramatic and lonely setting to full effect, building to a mysterious then unexpected climax.
What else do you recommend?
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- Black Barney
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His scariest stuff for me was the Mist, the Raft, the Mangler. Mostly the shorter stuff. But Misery was pretty scary.
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HOUSE OF LEAVES has a disturbing vibe.
THE TURN OF THE SCREW is creepy. THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE.
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- Michael Barnes
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That said, most Stephen King is a mixed bag at best. Some of his stuff is actually quite good pop fiction. The short story collections mentioned above are all worthwhile. The Shining is great, but the movie is actually better.
I read some Dean R. Koontz and Robert McCammon back in the day, because my mom was reading that stuff too. We read a lot of the same stuff. It's kind of weird that she liked horror since she really doesn't now.
Those Necroscope books by Brian Lumley (?) were total junk, but they were really fun. At least they were like 20-25 years ago.
But it was really Clive Barker that I got caught up in...I read EVERYTHING starting with those Books of Blood with the stupid Halloween mask covers. He was WAY more literary and aggressively unpleasant than King and the other bestseller-class horror writers. I think I read everything up to Galilee, which just kind of lost me. Some really awesome short story work in particular.
The only modern horror writer of note that I've read is Thomas Ligotti...his stuff is REALLY good.
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Alan Moore's Swamp Thing run, from Love & Death, American Gothic and the Brujeria storyline is pretty great as well.
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In the vein of 'Turn of the Screw,' I highly recommend Sarah Waters 'The Little Stranger.' A slow burn in a British Manor, it still creeps me out three years after reading it.
Already mentioned, 'House of Leaves.' Danielewski has made a name for himself with "post-modern" fiction, but this title is his first and best.
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King's ode to Lovecraft came out last year. 'Revival' is pretty good, especially compared to the garbage he published months earlier (ahem, 'Dr. Sleep'). King's short story "N." is even better Lovecraft-eque, but the credits are misplaced with Machen.
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Short story writing at it's dirtiest and most "internet" can be found in Dathan Auerbach's 'Penpal.' The stories can probably still be found online somewhere, which may be the preferable vehicle.
*****
And if King has become too predictable for you (i.e. you've read 10+ books), give Dan Simmons a try. 'The Terror' is a fine alternative history piece with evil in the Northwest Passage and 'Drood' is a fine alternative history piece with evil in the development of Charles Dickens last novel. Stay away from his book 'Abominable.' It sucks.
If anyone is considering re-reading King's 'It,' try Simmons 'Summer of Night.' It's a pastiche, but entertaining enough.
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And if King has become too predictable for you (i.e. you've read 10+ books), give Dan Simmons a try. 'The Terror' is a fine alternative history piece with evil in the Northwest Passage and 'Drood' is a fine alternative history piece with evil in the development of Charles Dickens last novel. Stay away from his book 'Abominable.' It sucks.
Carrion Comfort is good too.
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Maaannnn....
I'm 2/3 through 'Carrion Comfort' as we type. I know it has a lot of love in the genre, but I'm having a tough time with it. I'll reserve final judgment until I finish, but thus far I can't find the mass appeal.
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- Space Ghost
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My two favorite classic horror books are Dracula and The Picture of Dorian Gray.
Modern vampire books are a bit different because so many people do them so poorly. I think that Martin's Fevre Dream is quite good. As is Kostova's debut novel, The Historian --- which isn't necessarily a horror book, but one that is interesting in its own right.
As for King, I think the Shining and It are probably my favorite books of his. I am also partial to Needful Things, but that may be because Max von Sydow stars in the main role in the movie version. I also thought that Cujo stood a little above his others.
I agree with Barnes that Barker is a great author. My favorite by him is probably Weaveworld, although that might be classified as "dark fantasy". In the dark fantasy vein, my favorite is probably Bradbury's Something Wicked this Way Comes -- which is probably one of the bigger inspirations for much of King's work and at least Gaiman's American Gods.
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Short stories cover all my need for horror literature. Apart from James and Lovecraft i also very much appreciate Artur Machen, Algernon Blackwood and William Hope Hodgson.
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Abominable
Summer of Night
Winter Haunting
and now
Carrion Comfort
I feel most of his works are average at best. What's interesting are the themes he revisits. IMO, his persistence paid off with the back-to-back successes of 'The Terror' and 'Drood.' As most of his work, they suffer from the absence of a critical editor. However, I think they represent his most mature offerings. It's a shame that he hasn't been able to strike similar chords with newer work like 'Abominable' and 'Flashback.' 'Black Hills' was merely okay.
As far as older alternative vampire fare: most critics agree it's 'I Am Legend,' 'Salem's Lot,' 'Carrion Comfort,' and to a lesser extent - 'The Hunger.'
I'd add these contemporary titles to that list; Joe Hill's 'Nos4a2' (already mentioned) and Justin Cronin's 'The Passage.' Big, epic stuff. Mind you, Cronin's sequel is terrible. Here's hoping he doesn't cock up the third.
'Dracula' is my all time favorite, but a good ol' rollicking adventure that includes Dracula is Elizabeth Kostova's 'The Historian.' Less scary, but beautifully written and well paced.
Just my two cents. I know I can be a bitchy book snob. This, despite occasionally enjoying the gutter trash writing of Richard Laymon.
Has anyone tried Adam Nevill?
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'The Descent' by Jeff Long was quite enjoyable. Lovecraft and Barker are a given in a Top Horror list.
Richard Laymon, Douglas Clegg, and Edward Lee have decent horror, but in a 'throw blood and tits in the your face' kind of way.
Simon Clark is also enjoyable.
My list of authors reads like a half-price book store because that is where I pick up horror novels at. Fun to read for 2-3 bucks.
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I recently found that his son, Joe Hill is pretty good, too.
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