I'm reading through three lists of best horror with two
friends (DeAnna
Knippling and M.B. Partlow), posting reviews as we go. (For more
information, including a list of the books, see this post.) To see the books I've reviewed so far, you
can view the list at the end of this post where I rank them.
Other than that, it's a solid horror story. He's rather good at writing the eccentric religious zealot, as well as the psycho bully (in this case, the same person). He manages to describe the dregs of humanity well in all his stories, to make you ache for something bad to happen to certain characters. But he also had some incredibly likable characters, from the grocer who stands with him to an elderly woman who takes no nonsense and doesn't appear to be afraid of anything. Even giant escaped creatures, that loom out of the mist to eat people and do terrible things to them.
The other stories included twisted late night clerks, a woman who gets delicious revenge, a Yiddish man mistreated on a cruise for no reason, a new take on the demon barber of Fleet Street, a frightened man who pays a steep price, a man who styles himself an antique dealer suffering for one of his oddities, a conceited jerk who wrongs a woman, sewer invaders, a dream detective, accidental revenge, killer crones, a mysterious well, a cosmopolitan gathering, killer stones, a deadly Christmas tree, a cartoon about a boy who wouldn't get out of bed, a time traveler, tourism gone wrong, doomed punishment, a grizzled man and an ancient monster, a confused man in a coffin, and an extermination gone wrong.
My new rankings:
1. The Handmaid's Tale (Margaret Atwood)
2. The Bottoms (Joe R. Lansdale)
3. Coraline (Neil Gaiman)
4. A Choir of Ill Children (Tom Piccirilli)
5. The Year's Best Dark Fantasy & Horror 2010 (Paula
Guran)
6. The Year’s Best Fantasy: First Annual Collection (Ellen
Datlow and Terri Windling)
7. Needful Things (Stephen King)
8. 1Q84 (Haruki Murakami)
9. Those Who Hunt the Night (Barbara Hambly)
12. Dark Forces (Kirby McCauly)
13. Dawn (Xenogenesis, Book 1) (Octavia E. Butler)
14. The Stranger (Albert Camus)
15. Dead in the Water (Nancy Holder)
16. The Witches (Roald Dahl)
17. Psycho (Robert Bloch)
18. The Damnation Game (Clive Barker)
19. The Wolf's Hour (Robert McCammon)
20. Berserk (Tim Lebbon)
21. Prime Evil (Douglas E. Winter)
22. Best New Horror, Volume 1 (edited by Stephen Jones
and Ramsey Campbell)
23. Flowers in the Attic (V.C. Andrews)
24. The Tomb (F. Paul Wilson)
25. Shadowland (Peter Straub)
26. Blood Meridian (Cormac McCarthy)
27. The Imago Sequence (Laird Barron)
28. My Soul to Keep (Tananarive Due)
29. Penpal (Dathan Auerbach)
30. World War Z (Max Brooks)
31. From the Dust Returned (Ray Bradbury)
32. The Red Tree (Caitlin R. Kiernan)
33. In Silent Graves (Gary A. Braunbeck)
34. The Cipher (Kathe Koja)
35. Drawing Blood (Poppy Z. Brite)
36. The Doll Who Ate His Mother (Ramsey
Campbell)
37. Hotel Transylvania (Chelsea Quinn Yarbro)
38. Naked Lunch (William S. Burroughs)
9 comments:
I loved reading The Mist. The ending was phenomenal. And while it's not horror, it's up there with The Stand and The Long Walk. (Of course my all time favorite is Dark Tower, but I digress).
I love seeing World War Z on your list. Another great read. The movies are good but something about reading the books...there's nothing like it.
This sounds like a solid anthology.
Did you see King has a novel coming out in the Fall? Written with his son, Owen. Called Sleeping Beauties, I believe.
Sorry to hear about Bryant. I'm not too familiar with many of those authors - King, obviously... I haven't read or seen The Mist, but it clearly had an effect on my wife, who still doesn't like driving through, well, mist. I like how you're making a lot of good recommendations with these posts.
Good for you! I find that nothing reinvigorates my writing juices like a good reading spell:)
I always like reading your take on horror. I read The Mist a long time ago and never noticed the things you mentioned. I also forgot all about him having sex with that girl while his wife was missing. I did recognize a lot of those authors.
I've read the Mist. The interlude with the girl was not my favorite part. I assumed the Mist had something to do with it ;-)
I recognized quite a few authors in the line-up. Your post has rekindled my desire to sneak into the 'other' world of book-reading ;-)
Thanks for pointing out the misogyny in The Mist. In all my readings of it, I've never approached it with that important lens. I was too preoccupied sympathizing with the terrors of it, both human and inhuman. It's superb in many ways, but that does sound like a glaring flaw that will color it on my next reading.
I haven't read The Mist. I'm not too pleased to hear that women are described by their looks. But knowing King's works, it's probably still a good read.
What a great list! As a writer of dark fiction, I'd love to be on a list like that one day. If you and your friends would ever like to review a novel from a newer writer of horror, let me know. I'd be happy to send you some ebooks.
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