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December Group Read #1- The Willows
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yea, i liked that last line.
I'm with many others, that it took me a little to get in to this short story. At first the description was tedious, but made sense at the end when the landscape is a character all its own and the reason for the suspense. I can completely relate to the psychological thriller part (as someone who has been in the woods in the dark, and as someone who was abandoned on a river by her older brother (while tubing) when she was 8--I still believe the shoe I saw in the woods by the river must surely have belonged to the "person" my mind conjured up in the distance--no joke). Our minds try to create recognizable shapes, and when we are fearful of the unknown, these exact things, that happened in the story, can happen to us. I think that's why I found it so convincing and "scary."


oh yea, i'm that horrible older brother who locked both of his sisters out of the house--i did let them back in before it got dark, though.

Jennifer, when you make Comments, just above the right corner of the box you'll see: (some html is ok). Click on that and go down till you see: •spoiler. Cut and paste those two instructions at the beginning and end of the bit you want to hide.

Alex G wrote: "oh yea, i'm that horrible older brother who locked both of his sisters out of the house--i did let them back in before it got dark, though."
I wouldn't say horrible. At least you gave in, in the end. My brother just went about his merry way. I didn't see him again until the landing. My tube had a hole. I waited on the bank of the river, totally alone, for what felt like forever, before my dad and grandpa came by in their canoe.
Lena wrote: "Personal experiences/knowledge will always make it scarier."
I totally agree, Lena. Being able to relate, even in some small way, makes this story much scarier. I think just about everyone has had some experience of letting their imagination "run wild;" but; I guess what I'm trying to say is, I don't think I would have found it as scary had I not experienced that abandonment on the river as a kid.
I wouldn't say horrible. At least you gave in, in the end. My brother just went about his merry way. I didn't see him again until the landing. My tube had a hole. I waited on the bank of the river, totally alone, for what felt like forever, before my dad and grandpa came by in their canoe.
Lena wrote: "Personal experiences/knowledge will always make it scarier."
I totally agree, Lena. Being able to relate, even in some small way, makes this story much scarier. I think just about everyone has had some experience of letting their imagination "run wild;" but; I guess what I'm trying to say is, I don't think I would have found it as scary had I not experienced that abandonment on the river as a kid.

Lena wrote: "Was he grounded?"
Ha! Yes. He was punished for the rest of the camping trip. My father made him do all the heavy lifting, the dishes, and camp tear-down.
Ha! Yes. He was punished for the rest of the camping trip. My father made him do all the heavy lifting, the dishes, and camp tear-down.

Like this with NO spaces between the bracketed text and the brackets. I had to do it this way so it would read in this post. First one is placed before your text, the second one at the very end of your text. The / closes the spoiler.
< spoiler > < /spoiler >
A nasty bout of the flu kept me from starting on time, but I've just begun and it's pretty atmospheric in the first few pages.

(view spoiler)


Jennifer I think most of us found the river lovely but hard to navigate, lol.
I want to read Wendigo now."
I just read The Wendigo yesterday. It's in the same vein as The Willows and also really good. The Willows spurred me to read more Blackwood, and there is a massive mega-pack available on Kindle Unlimited (contains 36 stories/novels), so I grabbed it. The short stories I have read are pretty strong, but I ended up speed reading the novel because it didn't hold my interest.

Hope you're feeling better now, Jesse.


@Bark so funny!


Perry wrote: "Jesse wrote: "A nasty bout of the flu kept me from starting on time, but I've just begun and it's pretty atmospheric in the first few pages."
Hope you're feeling better now, Jesse."
Thanks, Perry, I'm feeling much better. And I just finished the story.
Hope you're feeling better now, Jesse."
Thanks, Perry, I'm feeling much better. And I just finished the story.

A great story!
I finished the novella and I'll just post what I used for my review:
The last half of the novella is excellent, but the first half often bogs down in Blackwood's slow reveal. That's fine for the opening as it builds the sense of atmosphere and environment rather brilliantly. But pages of the narrator arguing with himself over the validity of his suspicions . . . it brings out the "let's get on with it!" in me. That said, Blackwood's setup is more than finely delivered as the story works its way to closing pages worthy of Poe. Interesting read and my first (I'm ashamed to admit this) Blackwood.
The last half of the novella is excellent, but the first half often bogs down in Blackwood's slow reveal. That's fine for the opening as it builds the sense of atmosphere and environment rather brilliantly. But pages of the narrator arguing with himself over the validity of his suspicions . . . it brings out the "let's get on with it!" in me. That said, Blackwood's setup is more than finely delivered as the story works its way to closing pages worthy of Poe. Interesting read and my first (I'm ashamed to admit this) Blackwood.
Yeah, no worries, Jesse. This was my first Blackwood as well.


me too! it is, methinks, the malaise--or hypercritical attitude borne from a plenitude of media and rapid lifestyle--of the twenty-first century reader in modern society.

For a moment, I wondered if it was supposed to be one of those vague "is it all in their heads, or real?" Types of stories. But nope, I think it was real in that story.
I wonder what happens to them after the final page.
Beth wrote: "I wonder what happens to them after the final page."
Yes, thank you, Beth! I couldn't help but wonder, "What now?" as I finished.
Maybe we should all come up with something.
Yes, thank you, Beth! I couldn't help but wonder, "What now?" as I finished.
Maybe we should all come up with something.



Background aside - I loved The Willows. The writing style felt a lot like a more-accessible Lovecraft, to me. I love stories that creep up on you, that give you only a taste of the horror so your imagination can do the rest.
I think this passage is beautiful and perfectly encapsulates the story:
(view spoiler)

I also enjoy horror that lets your imagination do the work and requires some effort from the reader. It seems some had problems with this aspect of the story though.
Books mentioned in this topic
Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions (other topics)The Light of the Fireflies (other topics)
Seventh (other topics)
Seventh (other topics)
Jennifer I think most of us found the river lovely but hard to navigate, lol.
I want to read Wendigo now.