Book Talk discussion
What Are You Reading?
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Gatorman
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Oct 16, 2012 08:51AM

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Also finished The Wendigo, which had some wonderfully chilling parts and some really clever writing. The monster itself, oddly enough, doesn't make the kind of appearance you'd expect, and I felt a bit short of a pay-off. But the atmosphere and foreboding and psychological detail was so good that I still enjoyed the read a lot. Oddly enough, no cannibalism, which the Wendigo myth is known for.
Took a peek into Classic Ghost Stories 2, but it begins with a story by M.R. James who can really drag things out, and has no table of contents. I hate it when there's no table of contents! I don't want to have to page through an entire book (or read through it) just to find the stories I might like.
Does anyone know how to see the bookmarks others make on your kindle? I already see the highlights, but there is nothing in my "settings" options to allow bookmarks, unless it's stuck invisibly under some other option.
Also reading "Morphology of the Folktale," an interesting but pretty academic study of how fairy tales are best classified and how their permutations work. In other words, the structures they hold in common. If you've ever heard of Joseph Campbell's "heroic cycle" or read "Hero with A Thousand Faces," his book that first proposed it, or Chris Vogler's attempts to distill it into screenplay-friendly books and lectures, you've got the gist of what "Morphology of the Folktale" is doing.
The first part is rough going, with plenty of passing academic references it is assumed one knows already (or cares about). Doing so raises issues a lay reader like me knows nothing about, so that makes the book a bit confusing to start. But when the preliminaries are out of the way, the book becomes very readable and interesting. So much so that I stayed up very late reading it.

I felt the same way about The Wendigo, Marc.
I don't know how to see the bookmarks of others. I don't even know if you can. A lot of the older collections of short stories that are free are like that-no clickable TOC. I HATE that!

Which "Wendigo" book would that be?


Read a good essay about it in Peter Straub's otherwise forgettable catch-all "Sides," a book of short pieces, and remembered it while reading Dracula, so now I'm reading that essay again. There are a few good essays in there, but there are quite a few clunkers and even super-clunkers.
Think I'll stop reading the essay for a while, though, as it assumes you've read the book and is rife with spoilers. The book not matching the movies means there are still spoilers to be had.

Bit of a departure for Grant, but I really liked the concept. Kinda like DUEL meets DELIVERANCE.
Mine, too.

I loved Dracula. I re-read it not that long ago and it stood the test of time, for me.
I hope you enjoy it!

I loved Dracula. I re-read it not that long ago and it stood the test of time, for me.
I hope you enjoy it!"
I tried it when I was much younger, but the sort of meandering scene-setting common to its Victorian style put me off it, back then. I have more patience now.
I really am enjoying it quite a bit now. I think Straub's essay helped me discover a few subtleties in it that there's a pretty fair chance I'd have missed otherwise. The way Stoker handles weather and atmosphere, particularly.

I also have a soft spot for stories told in the epistolary fashion, so there's another reason.
I hope you continue to enjoy it.


Did you know that, at the time it was published, Richard Marsh's The Beetle was a bigger hit?

I can't believe Dracula is getting such little love.

Give that man a smoking jacket and a pipe!
I personally prefer older, slower paced works to a lot of the modern "hit the gas and slam into the back cover doing 120 mph" style books, but there is a limit.


In both cases, no action is advanced -- you have scene setting instead. But both beginnings are very tightly written -- Jackson's beginning is a true masterpiece -- and immediately pull you from your ordinary life into a freefall into another world thick with atmosphere and intrigue. Though they concentrate on atmosphere instead of incident, still they let you know you are going someplace very special immediately and are already in masterful hands.
Dracula, by contrast, starts in a random, meandering way. "I'm someone you've never heard of, and I'm sort of futzing around and noodling in my diary a bit. Whatever's going on, there's no sense rushing it ..."
The book soon picks up greater speed and color, but its opening doesn't work hard to create a strong initial impression or sell the reader on reading further. Of it's type, it's not a top-notch start.

Those books can be fun, but wind up feeling like empty calories.

Those books can be fun, but..."
Exactly!

I love both styles, Jon. The slow burn and the fast. : )
I find good things in both.

Everything today is as Jon wrote, hit the gas at 120mph.
Almost all Victorian novels at that time have a habit of meandering and Stoker's novels are probably the worse. It is interesting to read his short story 'Dracula's Guest'. It is quite an interesting story.


i just finished reading THE TOLL. was like reading a long lost classic, a twisted love child of daphne du maurier an edger allen poe. loved it kealan! was it as fun to write as it was for me to read?

http://bostonglobe.com/lifestyle/styl...

A delightful little shocker, perfect for one of those old Hammer anthology films. Old school without the cheese.
I have to say, it reminded me of Le Fanu's work.
Mr. Burke's mastery of the short story is second to none.
Kealan Patrick Burke is the equal of Charles L. Grant, and a worthy successor to the title of "Master of Quiet Horror".

I love the author's sparse use of language. No word is wasted. As a result, this book goes by FAST! Plus there's the feeling of dread hanging over everything-it makes for a tense read as well as a quick one.


I bought the Kindle edition anyway. I am looking forward to his zombie book and the Brother's Keeper book coming out---hopefully soon.

I was a hold out for a long time, Chris. I finally got on there last year or so. Mostly I just use it to keep an eye on my favorite authors.
Thanks for the heads up, Jon! I did respond to Glen's post.

I am being stubborn, I know. I would probably like it if I joined.

Okay.
Who's Zukerberg?
I always wanted a minion.
I'm anti-social, too. I'm only on Facebook because I thrive on abuse.
Looking forward to them, too.
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