Julia's kind of a Turn of the Screw-esque one, IIRC. I haven't read it, but I've read about it.
Shadowland?
And my all time fave is It. It grooves on the "the monster is what you fear the most" theme, and I think King is at his best when writing from a child's innocent/sophisticated POV.
Straub's early stuff - Julia, and If You Could See Me Now - were about as terrifying as it gets.
Loved, loved, looooved these. And Floating Dragon was one of the first books that truly kept me up at night, although he claims his horror fans didn't like it. I thought it was damn scary. I'm readin ghis newest now, In the Night Room, and it's not horror, but it is spooky and thought-provoking and fascinating.
But then, neither the book nor the movie of The Exorcist spooked me even remotely, so I be weird.
This is my husband's scared-to-go-to-sleep book. I read the book so long ago, I barely remember it.
Stephen King never scared me in the -what's-that-noise-oh-god-oh-god way, but he creeped me out very effectively quite often. The kids in It, Jack's slow decline into madness in The Shining. Actually, the story that really truly *scared* me was The Mist.
The devil freaks me out lots, and I don't know why, since I'm not Xian, but somehow, the personification of evil just weirds me. Spooks me.
Drains still weird me out, because of it. I think about it every time I wash my face...and I tie hair hair back so it doesn't dangle too close.
Drains still weird me out
From It? I loved the book, and read it voraciously, racing to the end with bitten nails and a nervous stomach...but the end was a massive disappointment to me. Maybe nothing would have worked, for me at least, since the whole "what you fear is the evil" theme was carried out so well (i.e. what one thing could encompass all that effectively), but the end felt like a huge copout.
Still love the characters, though. I had a girl in a day camp where I worked that summer who was completely Beverly to me, minus the abuse. She looked and spoke exactly the way I pictured the character.
Yeah, it should have been harder to kill It, methinks. But was still good.
But then, neither the book nor the movie of The Exorcist spooked me even remotely, so I be weird.
The movie didn't do anything for me either. But then again, neither did Kubrick's
Shining.
Love the book, though.
And my all time fave is It. It grooves on the "the monster is what you fear the most" theme, and I think King is at his best when writing from a child's innocent/sophisticated POV.
Yeah, love that one. I want to read it again.
I just read
The Stand.
That was pretty good stuff, though the last few hundred pages felt a little anticlimactic.
I have mad, mad
The Stand
love. Have since I was a kid.
Even with Molly Ringwald? *snerk*
Especially
with Molly Ringwald!