Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts

The Shadows Kith and Kin Review

The Shadows Kith and Kin
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Another five stars collection of (partly) unreleased tales by Hisownself.
Do not miss the return of Reverend Jebidiah Rains from "Dead in the West" his smoking guns fight again against Evil!
Another interesting issue is the reprinting of the novellette "The Events Concerning a Nude Fold-Out Found in a Harlequin Romance": pure Lansdale, yummm...
But all the contents are outstanding so be sure you'll have a good read.

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Son of Rosemary: The Sequel to Rosemary's Baby Review

Son of Rosemary: The Sequel to Rosemary's Baby
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"Rosemary's Baby" was a five star classic that no one should pass up. Unfortunately, "Son of Rosemary" simply does not measure up as a sequel. The premise is unlikely and the novel simply lacks the creativity, class, and suspense of the original. Essentially, in the sequel, Rosemary, the mother of "Adrian" whose father is Satan, wakes from a coma to discover that her son is the wildly popular "Andy" who is the leader of a messianic movement in the modern-day world. The reader, of course, knows the truth. The most interesting part of the novel, to me at least, was the portrayal of what a "Christ versus Antichrist" scenario might be like in the present day, and this is, indeed, the theme of the novel.
Unfortunately, since the reader knows the truth, there is none of the suspense which made "Rosemary's Baby" such a classic (and I am not overusing that word here). Further, the story's ending is unsatisfactory and unsurprising. All in all, this is a quick read to which most readers will not return, and it leaves the reader unsatisfied albeit mildly entertained.

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And the Ass Saw the Angel Review

And the Ass Saw the Angel
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Having arrived late on the Nick Cave bandwagon, I spent several years listening closely to his albums and finally decided it was time to take a crack at the book to which there are many allusions in his music. For example, Crow Jane, a character from one of Cave's most violent songs, is re-introduced here as the vile woman who whelped the hapless narrator, Euchrid Eucrow. So first I read the reviews, and then I tackled the actual book itself.
Is "And The Ass Saw The Angel" hard to read? Yes. Are there made-up words? Yes. But then there are many novels, great and not so great, that are both hard to read and that contain many seeming nonsense words and phrases. On reading Cave, I think of Faulkner (made-up places and words), Flannery O'Connor (particularly the parallels with her novel Wise Blood), and of H. P. Lovecraft, whose novels and short stories are packed with the kind of degenerates who people Cave's Ukulore Valley. Many of the words that Cave uses, and may be accused by some of inventing, are not inventions at all but rather are either obscure or archaic words. Some of the actually invented words are agglutinations of two or three real words, so put together as to make more vivid the idea being expressed. Cave is obviously a master wordsmith and his command of English demands a similar level of erudition from his readers. One of those hefty dictionaries seen in university libraries just might be needed by some.
The story itself is populated by all the lowest, most degenerate and filthy specimens of humanity imaginable. Narrator Euchrid Eucrow, born mute, is himself the unwholesome and wretched spawn of diseased loins. It is telling that the Ukulore Valley's most sympathetic characters are the town whore and the daughter she bore in death.
The Ukulites themselves are above the others at the start, the God-chosen masters of the valley. Hard-working, God-fearing, and sober, only they have a real future there and a stake in the status quo. Everyone else is there to be used when needed, but officially ignored otherwise. I don't know about other readers, but though this novel is putatively set somewhere in the American South, I detect a whiff of Brigham Young and the Mormons about the Ukulites story. Cave knows his Bible, and this book is replete with Biblical quotations and allusions.
I don't want to ruin the story by telling it here, but suffice to say it is a brutal, bloody, filthy, vulgar and sometimes hilarious mockery of bigotry and religious zealotry. Euchrid, rejected and abused by all and sundry because of his origins and his condition, retreats into the confines of his ramshackle, jerry-built Kingdom of Doghead and plots revenge on all who have made his life sheer misery. How it all ends is a comic surprise.
And The Ass Saw The Angel is not a bad literary debut for a man best known as a songwriter. The story and the language betray Cave's longtime fascination with the American South. And this is where it really loses a star. Cave tries to make his characters sound "southern" by having the narrator (Euchrid Eucrow) say words like "ah", mah" and "unnerstand" in place of proper English enunciation, but then he often forgets that mid-sentence and lapses into Standard English or sometimes even lets loose with a bit of Aussie slang! Cave or his editors should have been more careful. But though the book is filled with graphic descriptions of human and animal cruelty of the basest sort, intrepid readers who are not literal-minded may find this to be a very engrossing novel noir indeed. Four bright stars and may Cave write soon again!

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Mule: A Novel of Moving Weight Review

Mule: A Novel of Moving Weight
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I enjoyed reading this book. It was well-written, had interesting characters, held my interest all the way through, and didn't give away the ending until the end.
I would really like to tell you more about the book, but that would ruin it for those who haven't read it. So all I will say it that the book told the story of drug dealing for what it really is.
It's an entertaining book to read. I recommend it.

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Mage: Sorcerers Crusade (Mage the Sorcerers Crusade) Review

Mage: Sorcerers Crusade (Mage the Sorcerers Crusade)
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The Sorcerers' Crusade is a good setting for Mage. A lot of the modern game focuses on how magic doesn't really work the way it's supposed to because people's belief in science is too firmly entrenched in the world's paradigm. In the SC setting, science is a bit less accepted, and magic works a little better. Paradox, which in the modern game is always bad, is called Scourge in this setting, and can occasionally help a Mage. The Technocracy is on more equal footing with the Tradition mages here, as both are struggling to put their paradigm forward as dominant.
There's quite a bit of history and world setting information in this book. Possibly too much, depending on your needs. Relatively little of the book is taken up with game system mechanics. What system rules there are cannot be found all in one place. The organization of the rules is somewhat loose. Like the modern game, the magic system is open-ended, with ability defined in areas of control rather than specific spells. But like most other Mage books, spells (rotes) can be found if one looks hard enough.
If you've played Mage: The Ascension, it will be easier to understand this book. If not, some of the game rules might be confusing. If you like the Mage magic system, but don't care for the dark-goth game world White Wolf sets the games in, this is probably the game for you.

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How to Survive a Horror Movie Review

How to Survive a Horror Movie
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While there were attempts at making "self-aware" horror movies before, it could be said that "Scream" was the best attempt at doing so. It is fitting then that Wes Craven writes a short introduction to "How to Survive a Horror Movie," a tongue in cheek manual on doing just that. This is one of those rare books that you could pass by in a book store, start flipping through, and decide then and there you must own it. It starts very strong with chapters on deciding if you are currently in a horror movie, what kind of horror movie you're in, and the unique skills required in surviving the many different genres of horror movies.
There are several laugh-out-loud passages, that I won't spoil here, and the book is filled with decidedly creepy pictures evoking the mood of the old EC comic books. Where the book falters is in the later chapters as the witty, self-aware horror movie depictions give way to simple how-to lists that offer no humor (the worst of which is the snakes on a plane bit that just falls flat).
"How to Survive a Horror Movie" does end with perhaps the funniest tip of the whole book with a "sure fire" way to defeat the devil (do yourself a favor and don't read it until the very end). While not a five star homerun, due to the last third of the book that starts to drag, this is an entertaining and light read that will please any horror fan and even the simple movie buff.


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The House of Thunder Review

The House of Thunder
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This book to me is a classic. Koontz brilliantly constructs this plot and makes it a joy to see unfold. I read this book a few years back and I still remember the pleasure I got from it. A couple months ago I gave this book to my girlfriend to read I got her hooked on Koontz now I am like her Koontz supplier hehehe. Anyways I dared her to figure out the plot before books end and to tell me. She had quite the imagination but could never come up with the plot. After she finsihed she was astounded by the sheer brilliance of this book. So why did I give this book 5 stars quite simply because it was a hard book to put down. I seen from other reviews some were disappointed with the ending but I bet for that moment of time when they were reading it all were captivated just as I was!!!

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#1 New York Times bestselling author Dean Koontz delivers a chilling novel of a traumatized woman and the terrifying place she'll never escape.

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Heaven's Spite (Jill Kismet, Hunter, Book 5) Review

Heaven's Spite (Jill Kismet, Hunter, Book 5)
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Book 5 of Lilith Saintcrow's Jill Kismet series is much like its predecessors, with lots of graphic violence, wry commentary, and mysterious goings-on. The plot unfolds in a familiar fashion, with a house full of nursing student zombies popping up here, a pile of disemboweled bodies showing up there, and a Hellish altar materializing someplace else. All that you really need to know about the plot is that it involves a constant stream of bad stuff that keeps Jill running frantically from battle to battle. Only in the rather bitter end will the pattern behind the chaos become clear.
Like the plot, the cast of characters is familiar, including the usual cops, the usual Weres, Sanctuary lady Galina, apprentice Gabriel, and boyfriend Saul -- who, to the sure disappointment of romance fans, spends almost all of his time offstage. Melisande Belisa, killer of Jill's mentor Mikhail, also makes an appearance -- an odd coincidence, given that Jill has just learned something disturbing about Mikhail. Perry, Jill's Hellbreed patron, remains an untrustworthy ally and an unpredictable adversary. Readers who have been hoping to learn more about Perry's motivations will have gotten what they asked for by the time they reach the line "To Be Continued" at the bottom of p. 298. They will also regret not having wished more carefully.
Yes, this book is the first volume of a two-parter, but it ends in a reasonable place. Readers will be much less distressed about being left hanging than they will about the unexpected and unwelcome turn of events that precedes the concluding pages. They will be even more upset about a piece of news buried in the "extras" section of the book: the next volume, titled "Angel Town" and due some time in 2011, will be the *final* entry in the series. This is disappointing not so much because the series has been so good -- it has been just OK -- but because this ending feels forced, like a finale thrown together at the last minute for a TV show that had been plotted out for five seasons but was canceled before the conclusion of its first. I had harbored hopes that this series would develop into something really interesting, but clearly that will not happen. Sigh.

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When a new hellbreed comes calling, playing nice isn't an option. Jill Kismet has no choice but to seek treacherous allies - Perry, the devil she knows, and Melisande Belisa, the cunning Sorrows temptress whose true loyalties are unknown.Kismet knows Perry and Belisa are likely playing for the same thing--her soul. It's just too bad, because she expects to beat them at their own game. Except their game is vengeance.Nobody plays vengeance like Kismet. But if the revenge she seeks damns her, her enemies might get her soul after all...

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