Book Talk discussion
What Are You Reading?
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Bill
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Nov 29, 2012 10:23PM

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Marc, I think I did come across a book with fake reviews. The book I was talking about was The House by Van Brunt. All the reviews here are 4 or 5 stars and I'm sorry, but I just don't see it.

Adam, agreed. For the first time EVER, I returned a book.

You're right, Lee! Either one is good eye candy AND good reading. ; P
And I probably would do a Tonya Harding on the supermodel. Just sayin'.

Usually I rely very strongly on the opinions of people I know, or other authors. Even the blurbs on the covers and on the first few pages will often be a good sign. That's one of the things about e-books I don't like -- you don't get the pages showing you the reviews. Sometimes those are quite interesting!

The trouble comes in for me with group reads. My reviews are generally all positive ones because if I don't like a book after about 10%, it's out. Life is too short, you know? But with group reads (for my horror group), I feel like I should give the book longer than 10% to be fair. When I do that and I still don't like it? Then comes a bad review.And some anger.


It's too bad in a situation like yours, Charlene, that at least someone hasn't read the book first. Otherwise it's of course not just you who may not like it and waste time and money on it, but everyone!
I regard even good reviews warily, but *no* reviews is just flipping a coin, at best. With horror, maybe worse than that, because the average horror story isn't very well written.

That could be because with the Kindle, I have so much more waiting for me to read-right at my fingertips. Or it could be that as I am getting older, I don't want to waste any of that precious time reading crap. : )
And I'm sorry, but that book was crap!

If I remember correctly, Lovecraft openly borrowed ideas and characters from other writers that fit into what was to become his "Mythos". Bierce and Dunsany, for example, influenced parts of Lovecraft's writing.
Personally, I still credit Lovecraft as the most imaginative thinker in the genre. Some of his concepts have been echoed in the research of Stephen Hawking. Hell, some of Hawking's theories on the appearance of some alien species are decidedly Lovecraftian. There are moments when I truly believe that the "Dark Dreamer of Providence" was precognitive in his vision of the universe.

I knew about Dunsany's influence, but the story surprised me because it seemed more than influence -- almost like shorthand.
I still credit HP with developing a layered universe around his ideas -- or whoever's ideas they were -- and being daring enough to create creatures with all the influence of myth about them while setting them in a world that paradoxically had no real myth about it.

The People of the Pit was written by A. Merritt in 1918.

Sounds like Berle.
I know Lovecraft had mentioned Merritt at least once. The story must have stuck with him.
It happens.


Unfortunately, I'm too like him in a way in a way he speaks about in that blog post which he wouldn't recommend -- I find it very hard to write when I don't have some certain minimum peace of mind. I can't write if I'm all wound up. It comes out complete junk if it comes out at all.

Approx 35%, and it's getting better.
I'm also listening to the audiobook version of THE WALKING DEAD: RISE OF THE GOVERNOR. It's better than the show's ever been.






Chris, what about the ending of Snowblind? Like a kick in the face, right? : )


It was chosen by some magazine (can't remember which right now) as one of the top 10 books of the year.
I would love to hear what you think of it when you're done!
I'm just over halfway through The Twelve. I like it better than the first book in the trilogy which was The Passage.



I spent yesterday skimming through Stage Whispers to refresh my memory. Today I am starting Nemesis: The Death of Timmy Quinn. YAY me!
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