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October 2015 - Spooky Setting / Atmosphere
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Travis
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Oct 14, 2015 03:54AM

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Travis, Pine Deep sounds interesting too. I have added the first of the trilogy to my TBR as well.
I'm still working through Dracula and enjoying it quite a bit more than I expected to. It is definitely much more spooky that my first choice for this month's theme.

Ron Pearlman is a good narrator. He's not someone who has a large vocal range, but he doesn't try to push it. Which is something of a relief - I hate it when narrators go full-camp with the voices. Also, I think his dry delivery adds good humor to the dialog, which feels natural.
Still early goings.



Yes it certainly counts as spooky Ariane. Just putting the link to the buddy read here https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/... to remind me as there are a few of us reading and discussing it.

It's about an 11 hour audio book, but it doesn't feel laborious. I am making a point of listening to it more often then just in and out of the car, which only totals about 50 minutes a day.


I agree with you, Kristie. I've had a couple of days to think about it now and I've gotten a little bit upset over it actually. Partly because (view spoiler)

I agree with you, Kristie. I've had a couple of days to think about it now and I've gotten a little bit up..."
Yes!! (view spoiler)

Yeah, when you mentioned 600 pages, I was expecting a longer audio file, too. Goodreads lists it at only around 400, so I'm guessing the Kindle pages must be off.

The reason I rate many books, including this one, as 2 1/2 stars is that they are basically good books marred by technical issues. In the case of this book, it has a lot of transcripts of interviews, diary style entries, film transcripts, etc. I read another book, The Dead House that does this too- and they both have pictures. It just seems awkward and gimicky- I'm sure it could work, it just doesn't in these two books.
I finished The Passage by Justin Croninlast night and really enjoyed this book. It is a chunkster at over 960 pages but it was definitely worth it. I discussed this book as part of a Buddy Read, link is here https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/....
This book is a journey through time and over various locations. For me, there were two locations in particular that I found super spooky/creeper.
The first was the compound, where the virus is tested on humans. The description of those infected is excellent (view spoiler)
The second was the Haven. The Haven is a small community of people, but nothing is as it seems and as a reader you can tell something is not right. There are very few men and all the women appear to be pregnant. There is a foreboding about the place.
I was also spooked by the way the virals move; at night and up in the trees and the atmosphere described gives you a tingle - you are just waiting for something bad to happen.
I gave this 4 out of 5 stars and will definitely be reading the second in the series, The Twelve.
This book is a journey through time and over various locations. For me, there were two locations in particular that I found super spooky/creeper.
The first was the compound, where the virus is tested on humans. The description of those infected is excellent (view spoiler)
The second was the Haven. The Haven is a small community of people, but nothing is as it seems and as a reader you can tell something is not right. There are very few men and all the women appear to be pregnant. There is a foreboding about the place.
I was also spooked by the way the virals move; at night and up in the trees and the atmosphere described gives you a tingle - you are just waiting for something bad to happen.
I gave this 4 out of 5 stars and will definitely be reading the second in the series, The Twelve.
Lynda wrote: "I'm liking The Strain so far. One of my big draws to it was the fact that it's written by Guillermo del Toro, being that he's such a visual artist. I feel like that talent translate..."
Ron Pearlman would make an interesting narrator. I listened to I Am Legend and Other Stories, that narrator, not sure of the name, went full-camp more than once, almost made me want to stop listening!
Ron Pearlman would make an interesting narrator. I listened to I Am Legend and Other Stories, that narrator, not sure of the name, went full-camp more than once, almost made me want to stop listening!

Love, passion, obsession, and characters with deep and dark secrets kept me turning the pages. The story haunts me.





Beautifully written but so achingly sad. I went into this blind, I've just read / seen a large amount of people recommend it. 614 users on Goodreads have tagged it horror, it's definitely atmospheric but horror? I wouldn't class it as that. Has anyone read it on here and what did you think?

Beautifully written but so achingly sad. I went into this blind, I've just read / seen a large amount of people recommend it. 614 users on Goodreads have tagg..."
I've had it for a while, mainly because so many have said wonderful things about it. However, I never started it and think it's because some part of me realized it couldn't be a happy book.

Beautifully written but so achingly sad. I went into this blind, I've just read / seen a large amount of people recommend it. 614 users on Goodreads have tagg..."
I've had it on my TBR for a while. I really liked Patrick Ness' Chaos Walking series.

Well that's exactly what discussion I was hoping for if someone else had read the book. The young boy in the book has a visit from the 'monster', a large yew tree that comes to life (at 12.07 most nights) and can be rather destructive to property and even people. It's hard to explain more without giving the point of the book away. As I said, atmospheric definitely, spooky could be used to describe it but I'm really confused by why so many people have tagged it as Horror. I just didn't see it that way within the context of the story.


Isn't it nice when you end up liking a book that you hadn't any especially high expectations about?

Totally! I often avoid books because I don't want to be disappointed (I want every book I read to be amazing - I know, I have high expectations.) I guess it comes back to the old adage - "Never judge a book by it's cover/length/price". It's good to reminded of this.


I don't know whether you've peeked in the Bird Box thread but there were mixed thoughts on the book. I hope you enjoy your pick Lisa.

The atmosphere and some locations of it are really creepy, like the compound and the haven, like Anna said.
But for me, the spooky feeling comes essentially from the atmosphere created by the story and the writing. And really, to me, a mountain covered with snow during the night, when you know monsters are out, what's spookier than that?
I will definitely be reading the sequel.



I did take a look at a few of the posts and saw that opinion was divided. I read the first few pages on my kindle yesterday and it didn't do much for me at all which is why I decided to go for something else. I think it is a book that I will want to read one day but not at the moment.

I did the same thing with that book. Now, I've been waiting years for the third book to come out! They keep pushing out the expected publication date. I'm going to have to re-read The Passage and The Twelve once it is actually published.

I think I'll wait a bit to read the second, so that I won't wait too long to read the third, which is expected for May 2016...

I think I'll wait a bit to read the second, so that I won't wait too long to r..."
Yes, I'm hoping that date sticks! It was October 2014, then October 2015, then December 2016....I'm hoping that since they moved the date earlier this time that it's a good sign.

Camilla, thanks this sounds like a good book for me as I am new to scary stories... the cover sort of scared me though.

I liked it, but didn't love it, and doubt I'll finish the series. Here's my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
It's not something I would typically read, but it was well-written. As I've said before, it's primarily because it's from Guillermo del Toro that I picked it up. I think the pacing might be a factor for some people. It didn't bother me, but it did affect any sense of urgency. The "spook" factor really lived in the descriptive scenes, which at times were visceral.

LOL, I think the cover was the scariest part of the whole book! I have to admit I found it a bit repulsive, so I usually turned it upside down on my bedside table.


@Lynda - I'm glad you liked it, although not enough to continue with the series. I'll let you know what I think when I get to it.
@CFDeeDee - I'll be curious to hear what you think of the book.

Books mentioned in this topic
Water for Elephants (other topics)The Passage (other topics)
The Passage (other topics)
The Passage (other topics)
A Little Life (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Jonathan Aycliffe (other topics)Amanda Grange (other topics)
Guillermo del Toro (other topics)
Guillermo del Toro (other topics)
Justin Cronin (other topics)
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