While Floating Dragon scared the crap out of me, Shadowland has stayed with me. I think I've read it maybe 3 times, and like Frank said, it'll come back and haunt ya.
'Dirty Girls'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I don't think I read Shadowland. Maybe I should.
I found it really weird that they had Straub in fiction in the used bookstore, but King in horror (even stuff like The Green Mile ).
Was Shadowlands the one with the house? And the kids?
Maybe I'm thinking Elizabeth Hand (whose, BTW, Waking the Moon? I really love. NSM some of her other stuff.)
Now I'm going to have to look for Shadowlands.
Tommyknockers will always freak me out, for the reasons described above. But the first half of The Stand is the scariest piece of King's horror I've ever read, period. (Though I have to put in a word for The Mangler ). Gaiman's We Can Get Them For You Wholesale freaked me out, too.
I know I read Tommyknockers, which was a huge book, staying up all night in sophomore year of high school. I totally don't remember the story though.-- id it have anything to do with menstruation?
Oh, lord, "The Mangler." And "Breathing Lessons" was fairly freaky, too. Bet they won't be making a movie of that one.
Was Shadowlands the one with the house? And the kids?
Maybe I'm thinking Elizabeth Hand (whose, BTW, Waking the Moon? I really love. NSM some of her other stuff.)
Yeah, I think you're thinking of Black Light by Elizabeth Hand. I like that one, and Waking the Moon is all sorts of fun.
I haven't read Shadowlands since ... high school? Long enough ago that I don't really remember it. I should pick up a copy the next time I find one at a thrift store.
Ooh, We Can Get Them For You Wholesale is fantastic. Some people I went to school with actually converted it into a short play for one of our directing classes, and apparently getting the rights from Gaiman's people was a big pain, but they sent them the finished script and (from what they say, anyway) Neil Gaiman really liked it. I thought it was very well done.
That's my favorite Gaiman short story.
Foxtrot on A Song of Ice and Fire.