Casual Readers discussion
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What are you up to at the moment?
message 1051:
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Addy
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Sep 30, 2013 06:31PM

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I say Lonesome October or Endless Night. I've heard that Lonesome October is quite the departure from Laymon's typical fare, so it might be worth a go. Of course, Endless Night is supposed to be a serial killer romp, either one sounds good to me. And, Evans, I'll let you borrow my e-book of Funland anytime, man.

When I think of Laymon, I think crazy, funny, taboo, profane... since the characters and events in his stories tend to be highly improbable but manage to hold together with their own internal logic somehow.
For me, Laymon is the literary equivalent of movies like PEOPLE UNDER THE STAIRS or EVIL DEAD 2, horror that makes you laugh rather than scream.
I wonder if other readers have a different experience?
Has Laymon written anything that has given you genuine chills?

Picked up a couple extremely cheap volumes there (most interested in the Robert Silverberg book The World Inside, which I've never heard of before but had to buy because the synopsis is almost EXACTLY identical to a short story I'm working on as part of a dystopian sci-fi quadrilogy. I guess there is nothing new under the sun, but I'm interested in seeing how similar our execution of this same concept is).
Also passed by a used bookstore called THE LAST WORD, and found a couple of intesting finds there as well. I couldn't pass up a book with the subtitle TALES OF TERROR, now could I? Despite first impressions, the book is not written by Hitchcock. I'm hoping to discover some new-to-me obscure talent hidden within its pages. It has a story in it called A CABIN IN THE WOODS by John Coyne dated 1976 that at first glance appears to be the inspiration for the movie CABIN FEVER. I wonder if they credited him on the film?
The Hungry Moon by Ramsey Campbell looked pretty good, too.

I am cooking dinner, taking a shower, and sitting on my butt to read. 52 hours this week and my volunteer work (which I wouldn't give up for the world). Exhausted but looking forward to sitting down and just enjoying my reads tonight (if I don't fall asleep). Hope everyone is having a fantastic day so far. Once again, I am jealous Evans! Luckiest man in the world on the book-buying deals.

Picked up a couple extremely..."
I used to have that Alfred Hitchcock book. There are very few authors in there I had ever heard of, but some great writing. Most of them, if memory serves, were written in the 30's, 40's and 50's. If it is the same book.

Don't be jealous, Cindy. He'll never read any of them. Well, maybe one or two thousand, but no way will he read them all.



The Hitchcock book was published in 1986, the stories in it range from 1959-1976. Most were late 60s - early 70s.

I can loan you mine, Sharon. I think it is lendable.

Picked up a couple extremely..."
You get some of the best picks!! The only one I have is Hungry Moon. It was the first Ramsey Campbell I ever read, and I really enjoyed it. Really bizarre.

Sorry, Sharon. I just noticed my computer is effed up and showing the newest post is from June 25. Disregard that last reply unless you still need a copy to read.

I heard the same thing from someone on here. I don't think they had that one. His cover art is so cheesy. I just couldn't take it serious enough.

The Hitchcock book was published in 1986, the stories in it range from 1959-1976. Most we..."
Okay. I was mistaken then. Maybe there multiple volumes published. Who knows. Let me know how that is, bro.

Here are the paperbacks I picked up:






















Harccovers obtained:



So I was a busy book purchaser the last several weeks.

Sweet! Now that's a great haul. I haven't started on BLUE WORLD yet, good to see you found that. And I see the name of the John Coyne fellow we were discussing on the cover of that STALKERS book.




It was probably something else I looked up then

Nice score!


What a great haul! I went out thrift store shopping, and didn't have much luck. Maybe I need to widen my territory.



Omg...i'm going tomorrow...i drive right past it. THANK YOU!
btw...we haave a chain called Savers here...its a step up from goodwill and the organize by genre...good selections and prices arre still pretty good.
Lina wrote: "writing my examn on the glass menagerie by tennessee williams. and i want to shoot myself just a little bit because it's so booooring."
I've ran into quite a few of those in business school. Hang in there!
I've ran into quite a few of those in business school. Hang in there!
I just got home and plan on reading for a little while. Maybe an hour or so. A friend at work loaned me The Bell Jar so I guess I'll be reading that one soon.



Getting ready to read for a while.


Sweet! Sounds like it was a productive hunt. I'm always on the lookout for those Shirley Jackson books, too, but for some reason I haven't found them anywhere yet. You'd think classics would be easier to find, not harder.

The Habitat for Humanity ReStore book section is fixed up quite nicely. From this photo I snapped today you'd be forgiven for not realizing it was a thrift store (thankfully, the paperbacks are still only 99 cents each, or 5 for $4):

Managed to find some pretty good stuff, too! (The two Laymon's came from Goodwill, and I realized I didn't own HEART SHAPED BOX, read it from the library, so I couldn't resist getting the original edition
):

All in all a fruitful book hunting day.
Yes, I am a Bookaholic.
You can tell because I bought a second copy of Dark Delicacies II. Why am I buying a book I already own? For only $1, how could I not get it to share with a friend later?
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