I loved King's "On Writing," so I guess I'll have to find "Danse Macabre."
Me too. Of course horror scares me so they will be the only Stephen King I ever read. But I really liked "On Writing."
Sadly, "Danse Macabre" isn't available as e or audio from my old library. I just checked. Or, drat, my new library. I could have used that as a poke to go get a new card. (Still keeping my old one.)
Sadly, "Danse Macabre" isn't available as e or audio from my old library. I just checked.
Do you want me to send it to you?
Do you want me to send it to you?
Send it to me too, again, pretty please?
::bats lashes::
Which address, Jilli?
Gothiccharmschool at gmail?
Or at Gothic-charm-school dot com?
The gmail one, please. It's easier for me to keep track of things on the phone there. Thank you!
What's Bradbury's scariest story to you?
For me it's "The Crowd." I saw the Ray Bradbury Theater adaptation of that while on vacation as a teenager, and it's stayed with me through all the years.
Has Ray Bradbury Theater ever come out on DVD?
They have it on VHS at Le Video and I'm curious to check it out.
::stares at Kindle app on phone::
Wait, wait, wait, how have I not already purchased
From The Dust Returned
to have with me at all times? Of course I have
Something Wicked This Way Comes
(it was the second book I downloaded to the phone, the first being
Dracula),
but I'm baffled that I don't have
From The Dust Returned.
Do you want me to send it to you?
Thank you!
It shall be my treat for unpacking my whole office today.
I'd suggest that you don't read "The Small Assassin" until Rose is much older.
Heh, I actually read it just a few weeks ago (been slowly making my way through a Bradbury collection ever since he died), but I thought it was more funny than creepy. The premise is unsettling, but I couldn't get past the fact that the mother thought her baby was evil
because he didn't sleep at night.