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Themes > Classic Mummies and Zombies

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message 1: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
Post your favorite classic stories with mummies and zombies, or ghouls for that matter.


message 2: by Ray (last edited Oct 01, 2011 08:21AM) (new)

Ray (woadwarrior) | 13 comments Pharos The Egyptian by Guy N. Boothby Pharos The Egyptian by Guy Boothby is a grand mummy novel from 1898. (Much more enjoyable than Stoker's Jewel of the Seven Stars.) Boothby's book can be found free on-line at the following link:

http://manybooks.net/titles/boothbygo...


message 3: by Cathy (new)

Cathy | 164 comments Lovecraft did a mummy story! Well, a tombs of the pharoahs story ...
http://www.yankeeclassic.com/miskaton...

Zombies/Zuvembis:

http://www.manybooks.net/titles/howar...


message 4: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
Thanks for the recommendations!


MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) One of the things I enjoy about discovering all of these Victorian monster potboilers is they are free of contemporary "taint," if you will. So much depended on the Hollywood-free imagination (not that I don't love films). It's quite fascinating.


message 6: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
Very good point, MountainShelby. I agree. I think that Hollywood has very little creativity nowadays.


message 7: by Moon (new)

Moon I liked Stoker's The Jewel of Seven Stars.


message 8: by Kurt (new)

Kurt Reichenbaugh (kurtreichenbaugh) | 54 comments Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" wrote: "Post your favorite classic stories with mummies and zombies, or ghouls for that matter."

Thanks for the tip, Ray. Sounds like a good one.


message 9: by Philip (new)

Philip Hemplow | 21 comments MountainShelby wrote: "One of the things I enjoy about discovering all of these Victorian monster potboilers is they are free of contemporary "taint," if you will. So much depended on the Hollywood-free imagination"

Word. Film and TV has had a profound and pretty pernicious effect on writers.


message 10: by MountainAshleah (new)

MountainAshleah (mountainshelby) There was an article circulating about how many young writers only know movies/TV . . . they have never read the foundational texts . . . fascinating.


message 11: by Cathy (new)

Cathy | 164 comments I have never understood why people who don't read would want to write.


message 12: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
I agree, Cathy. How can you even write if you don't read at all? The media are totally different from written word. Even a screenplay just doesn't have the feel of prose.


message 13: by Cathy (new)

Cathy | 164 comments Plus, why would you want to create something that you have no interest in?

I sometimes use a message board for Kindle owners, and it's heavily populated with people who self-publish on Amazon -- many of them brag that they never read ANYTHING but other indie/self-published writers. Really? You have zero interest in the entire universe of the written word that has been created by people who don't self-publish on Amazon?


message 14: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
Hmm. That leaves out a lot of books...


message 15: by Karen (new)

Karen (kazzakrisanna) | 34 comments Ray wrote: "Pharos The Egyptian by Guy Boothby Pharos The Egyptian by Guy Boothby is a grand mummy novel from 1898. (Much more enjoyable than Stoker's Jewel of the Seven Stars.) Boothby's b..."

Pharos the Egyptian is free for Kindle at Amazon


message 16: by Danielle The Book Huntress , Jamesian Enthusiast (new)

 Danielle The Book Huntress  (gatadelafuente) | 1347 comments Mod
Thanks, Karon!


message 17: by Kurt (new)

Kurt Reichenbaugh (kurtreichenbaugh) | 54 comments Cathy wrote: "Plus, why would you want to create something that you have no interest in?

I sometimes use a message board for Kindle owners, and it's heavily populated with people who self-publish on Amazon --..."


You can tell they don't read when you try to read what they write. It's painfully clear.


message 18: by Werner (new)

Werner A really good anthology of classic mummy stories is The Mummy: Stories of the Living Corpse (edited by Peter Haining, an indefatigable editor of collections of supernatural and macabre fiction). It includes stories by Poe ("A Few Words With a Mummy"), Conan Doyle, Lovecraft, etc.


message 19: by Martha (new)

Martha (hellocthulhu) | 325 comments Mod
Thanks, Werner, that sounds good!


message 20: by Karen (new)

Karen (kazzakrisanna) | 34 comments Another one for my TBR pile - thanks Werner!


message 21: by Werner (new)

Werner You're welcome, Martha and Karen --hope you like it!


message 22: by Michael (new)

Michael | 35 comments A pulp-fiction adventure-horror is The Eye of Karnak by John E. Muller, but probably quite hard to find.

I read it many years ago, so can't really remember much about it, but I've kept it so it must have been pretty good.

The Eye of Karnak by John E. Muller


message 23: by Kurt (new)

Kurt Reichenbaugh (kurtreichenbaugh) | 54 comments Michael wrote: "A pulp-fiction adventure-horror is The Eye of Karnak by John E. Muller, but probably quite hard to find.

I read it many years ago, so can't really remember much abo..."


Love that cover!


message 24: by Michael (new)

Michael | 35 comments I know! I think "lurid" and "exotic" are good adjectives for it.


message 25: by Cathy (new)

Cathy | 164 comments I adore old pulp covers, and they really got the look right on that one.


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