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Weekly Question- Oct 23 - Scary Books
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Robin P, Orbicular Mod
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Oct 22, 2023 07:17AM

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The Keep
Vita Nostra
Alena
Madam



The book was good until the halfway point (the front part scared me). Then, just not very good after that.



I recently read The September House by Carissa Orlando - interesting unreliable narrator, but it went much darker than I expected from the tone of the book.
I also really liked Lovecraft Country by Matt Ruff - where the Lovecraftian horrors are almost as scary as the racism of 1950s America.


The movie was a major disappointment, but the book was awesome.


I don't like horror or true crime - too much bad stuff out in the world already. Though some psychological books can be very interesting.


I am interested in vampire books but it’s rare that one of them really scares me. Let the Right One In was the best I read in this genre. How the author described the relationship between the human boy and the vampire was awesome.
In general I like it when the books do not only try to scare you but when interesting themes or relationships are explored through the horror elements.
But I can’t handle much horror.

I also liked The Sun Down Motel


Although apparently it's not the first horror book I've read (well, ok, attempted), it's the first one I truly thought of as horror, rather than just scary. To be honest, I'm not quite sure what attracted me ('library' in the title?), but the opening scene reminded me of Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency - which I didn't read, but watched the TV version of and really enjoyed. I know The Library at Mount Char is supposed to have horror elements as well as comedy, but in the 21% I was able to get through, the VERY minor comedic elements did not in any way make up for the truly gruesome horrifying element that finally made me throw the book down.
If anyone out there has read it, is it worth reading past the BBQ scene?
Also, is there anyone near me (Santa Barbara, CA area) who'd like my copy if it turns out I'm just not intended to read horror?
Tracy wrote: "Has anyone here read The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins? 
Although apparently it's not the first horror book I've read (well, ..."
I felt the same, I also thought it was more fantasy/book love, but it is definitely horror and it doesn't get any better. I think that is the point. I was sorry I read it.

Although apparently it's not the first horror book I've read (well, ..."
I felt the same, I also thought it was more fantasy/book love, but it is definitely horror and it doesn't get any better. I think that is the point. I was sorry I read it.


Although apparently it's not the first horror book I'v..."
I'm sorry you did too. I guess I shouldn't feel bad about stopping at 20ish%?

Horror certainly isn't a genre I go out of my way to look for, although a surprising number of SF and Urban Fantasy books have Lovecraftian elements. On the other hand, I do like a ghost story. I prefer my scares suspenseful rather than gory.


I have, Pam, and it freaked me out, but I like a good scare
For Halloween I'm reading


I’m currently reading Wolves of the Calla by Stephen King and GR tags it as horror, but I don’t really think The Dark Tower series is really horror more dark fantasy.

Among my favorite "scary" books
'Salem's Lot
Something Wicked This Way Comes
The House Next Door

No, not if you don't care for gruesomeness. I truly hated this book. I gave it 1 star, which is rare for me. Like you, I think the "library" term in the title is what got me interested. Plus, it has great reviews from people who enjoy horror (which I should have known is not me).

King writes much more than horror, but because he writes horror, everything he writes gets tagged as horror. I agree with you on the Dark Tower series.

No, not if you don't car..."
I can't even pass this book on to a friend (this was unfortunately a book I bought, rather than a library borrow...). I'm donating it to a good cause, in the hopes that someone out there finds this their cup of tea. But so that someone isn't caught unawares, like you and I and Robin P, I've put a sticky note inside warning that the book is gruesome.

I'm fine with scary, but I am steering clear of horror now. Even if another horror isn't as nightmarish as The Library at Mount Char, this isn't a genre that I find I'd actually enjoy anyway.
Scary/suspenseful can be fun sometimes though.
Misty wrote: "Jillian wrote: "I’m currently reading Wolves of the Calla by Stephen King and GR tags it as horror, but I don’t really think The Dark Tower series is really horror more dark fantasy."
King writes ..."
I loved 11/22/63 for its great depiction of the time (which I lived through) and overall story. But there are several short incidents with what I thought was unnecessary violence and brutality, so that confirmed to me that I don't want to read his horror books.
King writes ..."
I loved 11/22/63 for its great depiction of the time (which I lived through) and overall story. But there are several short incidents with what I thought was unnecessary violence and brutality, so that confirmed to me that I don't want to read his horror books.

If that one got to you, you probably do not want to read a lot of his stuff. He definitely does not shy away from the gruesome and brutal. There are quite a few that are not that way though: Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption is the first one that springs to mind.


The movie was a major disappointment, but the book was awesome."
I also thought Christine was one of the scariest books I ever read.

Books mentioned in this topic
Christine (other topics)11/22/63 (other topics)
Lessons in Chemistry (other topics)
The Library at Mount Char (other topics)
The Library at Mount Char (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Stephen King (other topics)Stephen King (other topics)
Stephen King (other topics)
Stephen Graham Jones (other topics)
Carissa Orlando (other topics)
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