Book Talk discussion
What Are You Reading?

The list is ridiculous.
Lisey's Story?
Someone is smoking Draino....."
Hey, I didn't say it was ALL great, but there were some in there I'd never heard of and added to my list.

Me too, Marc. Being of Irish descent, I always enjoyed stories like that. Charles De Lint was one of my favorite authors, along with Mercedes Lackey. Both write fantasy novels about faerie.

It is like those surveys where they say that a majority of people think that Snuggles the Fabric Softner Bear is a paedo and then five years later you found out that they asked ten people who were psychotic and imprisoned in a high security psych ward somewhere.

It is like those surveys where they say that a majority of people think that Snuggles the Fabric Softner Bear is a paedo and then five years l..."
LMAO!

It gave me the heebie jeebies.

http://cdn2.blogs.babble.com/stroller...
He totally freaks me out.
Charlene - when I was in uni in Tulsa, OK, I worked in a restaurant called Molly Murphy's and had to dress like 'Snuggles' and serve people stake. The money was excellent and showed that I have no shame.

I will add one note to "The Walking"---great build up and story ideas but an awful ending. Wrapped it up in 5 pages in completely unsatisfactory fashion.


So the restaurant had Snuggle bears serving steak?
WTF?"
It was called Molly Murphy's and everyone had to dress up as different characters. They had an old Excaliber car that was hollowed out and turned into a salad car. When the song Car Wash came on, we had to get customers up and wash the salad car and dance around them. Totally weird but the good thing is I would make $300 - 600 a night in tips. I work two to three nights a week and making more money than most people who worked full time.
http://www.mollymurphys.com/

I'm really wanting to read a good dose of Diana Wynne Jones, who wrote Howl's Moving Castle, later turned into the Miyazaki anime movie, as well as many other books, some only now coming back into print because of kindle. I downloaded A Charmed Life and read the sample for Dogsbody after seeing it recommended so strongly by Neil Gaiman. She's got a wonderful imagination.
The fairy mythology book I'm reading was a freebie, I think, and to me as entertaining a read as, say, The Brothers Grimm, so check it out if you want a good read.

It is like those surveys where they say that a majority of people think that Snuggles the Fabric Softner Bear is a paedo and then five years l..."
It took me a while to warm up to Pedobear, but I've laughed pretty hard at some of the gags.

THE GRIN IN THE DARK isn't Campbell's best work, but he does deserve his due.
I liked HOUSE OF LEAVES. It's unique, but maybe not one of the best.
I haven't read UNDER THE DOME, but I wouldn't think 11/22/63 belongs here. It's not a horror novel, so...

11/22/63 is a sci fi/fantasy novel.
I don't like debate.
That's why I stick with being right....

YAHTZEE!!!!!!

I do have Drood already, so I hope I have a better time with it than you obviously have. ;)

Now I'm giving Sandy Deluca a try with Descent. She released a free short story a ways back Death Moon and I thought it was so good that I would try one of her novels.

This book's original title was MFA GIMMICK."
The more I heard about how amazing it was, the less amazing it sounded.


Pfft, I don't want one. ;)
That probably has something to do with me having already read the book on Kindle, though. An awesome read, 5 stars.

Thanks.
Don't see the connection."
I thought all the oddball formatting, footnotes, and whatnot in HOUSE OF LEAVES was gimmicky and pretentious, like something an MFA student would come up with, much like Danielewski's other book, where every page has the exact same number of words, or whatever.

I am now reading J. Kilborn's Trapped. I have to say that so far, I am underwhelmed.
Not everyone can write a good inbred cannibal story.

Kilborn is just into overkill.
I'm between books right now, dealing with a fever and trying to do my 31 Books For Halloween list.

Kilborn is just into overkill.
I'm between books right now, dealing with a fever and trying to do my 31 Books For Halloween list."
Aww, I wish you felt better, Jon. : (
My inner rebel is protesting against Hugh Howey. Though I finally broke down and accepted the first Wool installment. I say accepted it because I didn't purchase it, it was free.
I just generally dislike what everyone else is liking.
Is that bad? : )

Kilborn is just into overkill.
I'm between books right now, dealing with a fever and trying to do my 31 Books For Halloween list."
Aww, I wish you felt bet..."
Thanks, Charlene.
No, it's not.
Sometimes, the mob doesn't rule, it drools. ;)


I saw him doing a reading of I, Zombie on its Amazon page, and got the impression the guy knew what he was doing well enough for me to take a chance on his zombie book. I'd rather get introduced to an author through something short and self-contained than by getting roped into a series, just in case it turns out I don't care for him.

Chris, you must have also read Endurance then, right?
You don't feel that at heart, these are basically the same books?

Oh, I definitely hear you regarding the series'. I would be interested in hearing your thoughts on this one, when you're done. : )

Hey Kealan, how goes it?

Will do.
Books mentioned in this topic
Springtime in Salt River / Love Thine Enemy (other topics)Ghosts of Burlington County:: Historical Hauntings from the Mullica to the Delaware (other topics)
Ghosts of Mount Holly:: A History of Haunted Happenings (other topics)
Haunted Massachusetts: Ghosts and Strange Phenomena of the Bay State (other topics)
Ghost Stories of Texas (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
RaeAnne Thayne (other topics)Jan Lynn Bastien (other topics)
Jan Lynn Bastien (other topics)
Cheri Farnsworth (other topics)
Jo-Anne Christensen (other topics)
More...
British Goblins, Welsh Folk-lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends and Traditions. It's an old one. Very informative and a lot of fun so far, if you're into mythology and folk tales, which I always have been.