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Book Recommendations > Need to be terrified!

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message 1: by John (new)

John Hey all Horror nuts out there!

I am back reading the genre after a number of years away from it but I have to say I am struggling to find anything that even hits the creep metre, much less the fright metre.

I remember reading novels in my twenties and having a tough time turn off the light late at night / early in the morning.

So I am asking for suggestions!

A little pointer, the whole vamp werewolf theme does nothing for me. IMO that well ran dry a long time ago. I have found some well written novels and enjoyable reads, but that is about it.

Suggestions???

Please and many thanks!


message 2: by Anne (w/ an E) (last edited Aug 26, 2018 11:24PM) (new)

Anne (w/ an E) (mzcatnthehat) | 826 comments What have you read that you enjoyed? I am also looking for for something...that I am having trouble describing.


message 3: by John (new)

John I have reread King and Straub, read a couple of Joe Hill books, Maberry, and a few others. I should revisist Koontz or maybe Clive Barker, but I am worried I will be disappointed.

Just want something to make me have nightmares like I used to. Maybe that is done with,


message 4: by WendyB , Christmas Mouse (new)

WendyB  | 5150 comments Mod
I'll recommend two authors to you: Michael Rowe and Christopher Buehlman. Excellent writing and lots of creepiness.

I'm reading Rowe's Wild Fell right now and it is wonderful so far.


message 5: by Lena (new)

Lena | 2683 comments Deliver, technically an erotica, is the last book that got me. Terrible nightmares; my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 6: by Lena (new)

Lena | 2683 comments The Sparrow is a gut punch.

If you can take it there's Cows.


message 7: by Randy (new)

Randy Money | 445 comments Paul Tremblay's A Head Full of Ghosts
Laird Barron's The Croning
Gemma Files' Experimental Film
Caitlin Kiernan's Agents of Dreamland
John Langan's The Fisherman

As you know, mileage varies, but these worked for me.


message 8: by Anne (w/ an E) (new)

Anne (w/ an E) (mzcatnthehat) | 826 comments John wrote: "I have reread King and Straub, read a couple of Joe Hill books, Maberry, and a few others. I should revisist Koontz or maybe Clive Barker, but I am worried I will be disappointed.

Just want someth..."


You may be right about that being done with. The things we like/ can deal with change as we grow.


message 9: by Kirsten (new)

Kirsten  (kmcripn) Scariest books I've read so far are:

Ghost Story by Peter Straub
The Ruins by Scott B. Smith


message 10: by Melanie (new)

Melanie | 1656 comments Try The Mall ,not quite bizarro but very weird, and one of my faves Dark Matter, this one gave me chills - very atmospheric.


message 11: by Jared (last edited Aug 27, 2018 01:07PM) (new)

Jared | 1 comments I am in the same place, been reading horror almost exclusively since I was 15 and not much does it for me anymore. Pet Semetary gave me goosebumps, as well as 'Salem's Lot, but the last thing to give me real chills was H.P. Lovecraft's "Herbert West – Reanimator" - something about the atmosphere of the story is just deeply unsettling to me. I loved it!


message 12: by Benjamin (new)

Benjamin Appleby-Dean (benjaminappleby-dean) Catriona Ward's Rawblood and Laura Purcell's The Silent Companions are two of my recent favourites.


message 13: by John (new)

John WendyB wrote: "I'll recommend two authors to you: Michael Rowe and Christopher Buehlman. Excellent writing and lots of creepiness.

I'm reading Rowe's Wild Fell right now and it is wonderful so far."

Thanks Wendy!

I read one by Buehlman and am planning on looking at more of his works. Loved his writing and he had me creeped out until the monster turned out to be a werewolf. But still enjoyed his writing.

I will check out Rowe as well.


message 14: by John (new)

John Kirsten wrote: "Scariest books I've read so far are:

Ghost Story by Peter Straub
The Ruins by Scott B. Smith"


I am worried about rereading Ghost Story. I enjoyed it so much 20 years ago and the last book I read by Straub was incredibly disappointing. But I will check out Scott. Thanks!


message 15: by John (new)

John Lena wrote: "Deliver, technically an erotica, is the last book that got me. Terrible nightmares; my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."

Oh, yeah not sure I can handle the topic. But thanks!


message 16: by John (new)

John Jared wrote: "I am in the same place, been reading horror almost exclusively since I was 15 and not much does it for me anymore. Pet Semetary gave me goosebumps, as well as 'Salem's Lot, but the last thing to gi..."

I really don't like Lovecraft but I think it has more to do with who he was and how I read his stories. Will check this one out, thanks!


message 17: by John (new)

John Thanks for the responses! I am looking at each of them! Keep them coming!


message 18: by John (new)

John Corinne wrote: "A Special Place: The Heart of a Dark Matter by Peter Straub A dreadful version of the master/apprentice relationship. I highly recommend :P"

Thanks, I actually have this book so I will add it to my list!


message 19: by John (new)

John Lena wrote: "The Sparrow is a gut punch.

If you can take it there's Cows."


Thanks! I will look into Cows, sounds like i might do the job. As for The Sparrow I should have added that I am looking to commit to a series.


message 20: by John (new)

John Randy wrote: "Paul Tremblay's A Head Full of Ghosts
Laird Barron's The Croning
Gemma Files' Experimental Film
Caitlin Kiernan's Agents of Dreamland..."


Wow quite the list! Thanks very much. Other than The Fisherman, which I have read, I look forward to checking these out. They seem to be along the lines of what I am looking for.


message 21: by John (new)

John Melanie wrote: "Try The Mall ,not quite bizarro but very weird, and one of my faves Dark Matter, this one gave me chills - very atmospheric."

Thanks for the selections! The Mall looks to be a series, so I will put that aside for now. I was concerned when I saw Dark Matter thinking it was Straub's novel (which I disliked greatly). I will definitely add this to my list.


message 22: by John (new)

John Benjamin wrote: "Catriona Ward's Rawblood and Laura Purcell's The Silent Companions are two of my recent favourites."

I am a sucker for historical fiction worked into different genres! Thanks for these two picks!


message 23: by Kirsten (new)

Kirsten  (kmcripn) John wrote: "Jared wrote: "I am in the same place, been reading horror almost exclusively since I was 15 and not much does it for me anymore. Pet Semetary gave me goosebumps, as well as 'Salem's Lot, but the la..."

I'm a 2nd gen Lovecraft fan.


message 24: by Kel (new)


message 25: by John (new)

John Kel wrote: "Naomi's Room by Jonathan AycliffeThe Hot Zone The Terrifying True Story of the Origins of the Ebola Virus by Richard Preston"

Thanks! I have actually started in on this list!


message 26: by John (new)

John Randy wrote: "Paul Tremblay's A Head Full of Ghosts
Laird Barron's The Croning
Gemma Files' Experimental Film
Caitlin Kiernan's Agents of Dreamland..."


Just read Agents of Dreamland! Thoroughly enjoyed it!


message 27: by Randy (new)

Randy Money | 445 comments Glad to hear it. Earlier this summer Tor released Black Helicopters by Kiernan, an expansion of a novella by the same title. Haven't gotten to it, yet, but I will. Like Agents... it looks very good.


message 28: by Christine (new)

Christine Lamitina | 2 comments Melanie wrote: "Try The Mall ,not quite bizarro but very weird, and one of my faves Dark Matter, this one gave me chills - very atmospheric."

Dark Matter was excellent atmospheric horror! I also loved Bird Box if you're seeking another can't-see-it-evil.


message 29: by John (new)

John Christine wrote: "Melanie wrote: "Try The Mall ,not quite bizarro but very weird, and one of my faves Dark Matter, this one gave me chills - very atmospheric."

Dark Matter was excellen..."


I actually have a copy of Dark Matter. I will add Bird Box tothe list (same author I am assuming?).

Thanks!


message 30: by Christine (new)

Christine Lamitina | 2 comments No, different author. This is Birdbox: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...


message 31: by John (new)

John Christine wrote: "No, different author. This is Birdbox: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1..."

Oh cool, thanks again!


message 32: by John (new)

John Benjamin wrote: "Catriona Ward's Rawblood and Laura Purcell's The Silent Companions are two of my recent favourites."

Thanks for this one, really enjoyed it. Finished it yesterday. You can see my review.


message 33: by Benjamin (new)

Benjamin Appleby-Dean (benjaminappleby-dean) John wrote: "Benjamin wrote: "Catriona Ward's Rawblood and Laura Purcell's The Silent Companions are two of my recent favourites."

Thanks for this one, really enjoyed it. Finish..."


No problem - glad that you liked it!


message 34: by John (new)

John Randy wrote: "Paul Tremblay's A Head Full of Ghosts
Laird Barron's The Croning
Gemma Files' Experimental Film
Caitlin Kiernan's Agents of Dreamland..."


Enjoyed A Head Full of Ghosts, thanks for the suggestion!


message 35: by Cecilia (new)


message 36: by Randy (new)

Randy Money | 445 comments You're welcome, John. And I second Cecilia's latest recommendation. Wormwood: A Collection of Short Stories is a terrific collection.


message 37: by John (new)

John WendyB wrote: "I'll recommend two authors to you: Michael Rowe and Christopher Buehlman. Excellent writing and lots of creepiness.

I'm reading Rowe's Wild Fell right now and it is wonderful so far."


Wow, thanks for this suggestion. Being Canadian it was a pleasant surprise!


message 38: by John (new)

John Cecilia wrote: "Wormwood A Collection of Short Stories by Poppy Z. Brite"

It is on the list! Thanks!


message 39: by John (new)

John Benjamin wrote: "Catriona Ward's Rawblood and Laura Purcell's The Silent Companions are two of my recent favourites."

Thanks for this one. Just finished it and really enjoyed it. Never thought the premise could be creepy but kudos to the author!


message 40: by Marie (new)

Marie | 4049 comments Try these two:

The Demonic by Lee Mountford by Lee Mountford
and
Hell The Possession and Exorcism of Cassie Stevens by Tom Lewis by Tom Lewis

I had to leave the light on with both of them!


message 41: by John (new)

John Lena wrote: "The Sparrow is a gut punch.

If you can take it there's Cows."


Hi Lena,

Yeah Cows was a bit much for me. I have little issue with the abuse of humans, but the whole animal abuse thing ... stopped half way through.

I will try your other suggestion though!


message 42: by Gordon (new)

Gordon Maybe try Michelle Remembers or Communion by Whitley Strieber (both of the authors believe what they wrote actually happened to them). Based on the authors you mentioned, try Robert McCammon (Swan Song), Dan Simmons (The Terror). I'd also suggest The Cellar by Richard Laymon.


message 43: by Gordon (new)

Gordon Also, more suggestions based on the authors you mentioned: Relic by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child as well as The Tomb by F Paul Wilson.


message 44: by Michael (new)

Michael Foster Kirsten wrote: "Scariest books I've read so far are:

Ghost Story by Peter Straub
The Ruins by Scott B. Smith"


I agree that The Ruins was surprisingly scary!


message 45: by Karen (new)

Karen (hmssparky) | 201 comments Phantoms by Dean Koontz by Dean Koontz
Pet Sematary by Stephen King by Stephen King (I had to read this with all the lights in the house on!)
The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson by Shirley Jackson


message 46: by John (new)

John Karen wrote: "Phantoms by Dean Koontz by Dean Koontz
Pet Sematary by Stephen King by Stephen King (I had to read this with all the lights in the house on!)
[bookcover:The Hauntin..."


Good picks! Read the first two years ago and am planning a reread. Read The Haunting of this past year and enjoyed it. The Series wasn't terrible, though different from the book.

Thanks!


message 47: by John (new)

John Melanie wrote: "Try The Mall ,not quite bizarro but very weird, and one of my faves Dark Matter, this one gave me chills - very atmospheric."

Dark Matter ... what a read. Great suggestion and thanks!


message 48: by Melanie (new)

Melanie | 1656 comments John wrote: "Melanie wrote: "Try The Mall ,not quite bizarro but very weird, and one of my faves Dark Matter, this one gave me chills - very atmospheric."

Dark Matter ... what a r..."


No worries, always looking for a good scare :)


message 49: by Lori (Nattey) (new)

Lori (Nattey) | 7 comments Read The Troop and Summer of Night.


message 50: by jamako (last edited Apr 05, 2019 11:01AM) (new)

jamako (jann1k) | 192 comments Well, John, what kind of horror is your drug of choice? I mean it is a vast genre and people are scared of different stuff. Despite naming authors are there any particular subgenres you enjoy?

A book I read recently and found very reminiscent of early Stephen King is The Siren and The Spectre. It is a great mash-up of different kinds of horror and its subgenres.
If you're looking for a tense but slow-burning historical epic with supernatural underpinnings try The Terror (also a great series on Amazon). Maybe the human mind is most unsettling to you: Last Days. Another good one I keep recommending is Seed, one of my favourite horror books of this decade. Dead Lake might be a good way to find out if Darcy Coates' writing is four you, it is a very quick read and a good example of her ability to build atmosphere. If you like this novella, odds are you'll also like most of her novels.

Not quite horror but certainly (very) dark fantasy are both Faerie Tale and The Child Thief (yes, that Peter).


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