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What are you reading the week of November 24, 2013? (Original Post) DUgosh Nov 2013 OP
"Sycamore Row" - John Grisham northoftheborder Nov 2013 #1
Reading and re-reading a bunch of Charles de Lint novels, PDJane Nov 2013 #2
"Quiet Dell" by Jayne Anne Phillips. SheilaT Nov 2013 #3
Still reading "Quiet Dell" SheilaT Nov 2013 #6
Old school splatterpunk. Snarkoleptic Nov 2013 #4
Into volume 3 of "Journey to the West" YankeyMCC Nov 2013 #5
Jonathan Kellerman's "Victims".... Little Star Nov 2013 #7
Bleeding Edge byThomas Pynchon pscot Nov 2013 #8

PDJane

(10,103 posts)
2. Reading and re-reading a bunch of Charles de Lint novels,
Sat Nov 23, 2013, 06:05 PM
Nov 2013

And some interesting, if aged and dated, sci-fi. I was lent the stuff before a friend disposes of her aunt's books....and I can keep what I like, which is nice.

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
3. "Quiet Dell" by Jayne Anne Phillips.
Sun Nov 24, 2013, 12:34 AM
Nov 2013

It's a novelized version of the murder of a woman and her three children in the summer of 1931 by a man who was a serial killer. I'm 150 pages in (438 pages total) and so far it's quite riveting.

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
6. Still reading "Quiet Dell"
Sun Nov 24, 2013, 11:11 PM
Nov 2013

but I was jolted out of the novel when a female reporter apparently direct dials from Clarksburg, West Virginia, to Chicago, Illinois in 1931.

Ummm, I'm almost completely certain it wasn't possible then. Definitely not long distance, because the first area codes, which allowed direct long distance dialing, didn't happen (according to Wikipedia) until 1951, and then only in a very, very limited area.

I was talking to a friend of mine this afternoon about this, and he told me that in Greensburg, PA, where he grew up, you still had to go through an operator for all calls until about 1959 or 60.

Snarkoleptic

(5,997 posts)
4. Old school splatterpunk.
Sun Nov 24, 2013, 01:40 AM
Nov 2013


http://www.amazon.com/Splatterlands-Reawakening-Splatterpunk-Michael-Laimo-ebook/dp/B00G2VSNZA/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top

Here's the review that prompted me to buy...
"Splatterpunk," for all who might not be familiar with this horror subgenre, is dark fiction that tends to be a little on the "wet" side.

Usually this genre features revenge-driven tales that are light on character and plot development, leaving the writers plenty of words to spend on the gore that's to follow, decorating the pages with arterial spray like demented Jackson Pollocks!

Happily for me, this book hits the trifecta, providing all the gore that's mandatory for the genre while strong characters and interesting plots give the material dimension. Within these pages you'll find everything from revenge-driven stories to disturbed (and deeply disturbing!) character pieces to bizarre hellscapes that would make even Clive Barker proud!

As with any collection, some stories I liked better than others, but all are good. Every single author does the splatterpunk genre proud, elevating it to something far more than a simple gore-fest. And believe me, these are authors you are going to want to know more about! Among my favorites here are Michael Laimo, Gregory L. Norris, Chad Stroup, and Allen Griffin.

Also impressive with this book, apart from the quality of the fiction, is the quality of the editing and the overall appearance of the book itself. The cover is great, the interior artwork first-rate. This is my second publication from Grey Matter Press, and once again I found no typos, and the formatting of my Kindle version is flawless, something you would expect from one of the "big six" name-brand publishing houses, but rare among small publishers. And as a reader of anthologies, I truly appreciate the links from the Table of Contents to the actual stories, something you almost never find in ebook formatting of collections like these!

Splatterlands avoids what I consider to be the most common pitfall to this genre, and that is - ahem - overkill. Usually by the halfway mark in any splatterpunk collection, the weapons of death have become so dull that they are nothing more than rubber Halloween props, offering little in the way of thrills or chills.

That's not the case here. With the editors keeping the stories varied yet intense, the death machine keeps churning out the gore with terrifying efficiency. And because they cared enough to stock the machine with real characters, the colors spraying out of that machine become that much more real, too.

If you're new to the splatterpunk scene, this a great way to get your feet "wet." If you're a seasoned splatterpunk veteran, don't let all my talk of 'character' and 'plot' turn you away. Trust me, the added depth only makes the gory bits better, and you don't have to wait around in any of these stories to get to the gory stuff!

But I do have a (bloody) bone to pick. They got the subtitle all wrong. Grey Matter Press didn't simply 'reawaken' the splatterpunk revolution.

They reinvented it.

Little Star

(17,055 posts)
7. Jonathan Kellerman's "Victims"....
Mon Nov 25, 2013, 10:43 AM
Nov 2013

Last edited Wed Nov 27, 2013, 12:57 PM - Edit history (1)

About a quarter of the way into it, so far so good.

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