I tried to get into HoL but was all "Meh."
Storm drains had a whole new creepiness after It.
For sure! Whenever someone approaches a storm drain in a movie or TV show, I'm like "Don't do it! TIM CURRY IS GOING TO RIP YOUR ARM OFF!"
Oz ,'First Date'
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 tried to get into HoL but was all "Meh."
Storm drains had a whole new creepiness after It.
For sure! Whenever someone approaches a storm drain in a movie or TV show, I'm like "Don't do it! TIM CURRY IS GOING TO RIP YOUR ARM OFF!"
I've only had footnotes thus far,but, yes. I basically always read footnotes and appendices.
There is at least one appendix that I recommend reading when it becomes relevant rather than at the end. I forget how many there are, but I think you'll know it when you hit it.
I finished Salem's Lot at about 3 a.m., and then got up and made sure I had garlic.
Salem's Lot had me keeping a close eye on the closet in my bedroom for quite a while.
King novels tend to be so overblown and everything-but-the-kitchen-sink that I don't find them scary. I think From a Buick 8 was the last long-form work of his that made me feel creeped out, and only in brief stretches. His short stories are a lot more powerful, though. "1408," "The Man in the Black Suit," and "The Monkey" all made my skin crawl.
I don't usually read super scary novels, but sometimes like the Bones type stuff...but the first time I read a book in that particular series (many many years ago) was in Montreal, alone, in a creepy hotel room. Serial killer stalking the city I was in? Not a good plan. Much easier when he's stalking more fictional-seeming places!!
What's everyone's "worst(best?) book to read alone in the house late at night?"
"The Haunting of Hill House". It will creep me out even if I read it in bright daylight.
Silk by Caitlin R. Kiernan used to be that way for me, but I haven't reread it in forever, so I don't know if it would still creep me out as badly. Well, okay, I don't know if the non-spider parts would creep me out as badly; I'm certain that my phobia would keep me jittering for a huge part of the book.
I've mentioned that The Night Flyer was the first story in a book I bought from an airport newsstand before discovering that I'd be flying a 12-seater into Peoria through what turned out to be a tornado cell, right? Who cares about vampires, it has a small plane crashing during a storm!
Scary books like Silence of the Lambs tend to freak me out more than scary books with a supernatural element.
You know, I would say that someone should make this move, exactly as described, in order to really fuck with reality, but I don't know that anyone would trust the creeptasticness of books falling off a shelf.