3 hours ago
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
Mini book review: Books of Blood: Volumes One to Three by Clive Barker
I thought I was a Clive Barker fan but as it turns out, I haven't consumed enough of his output to count. Sure, I've seen and quite liked Hellraiser (and Nightbreed is on my list of to-sees). But I also thought I'd read some of his books and, scanning his bibliography, I guess I was wrong about that. Because I thought I was a fan, I was surprised whenI didn't like his short story collection, Books of Blood, better. I do like horror shorts a lot and thankfully, this collection has a lot to indulge in. I found a few stories that I did like: the battle of wills in "The Yattering and Jack," the theatre's immortality in "Sex, Death and Starshine," "Jacqueline Ess: Her Will and Testament," when movies take form in "Son of Celluloid," the worst island in the world in "Scape-Goats." Again, however, many of the characters felt thin and I had difficulty connecting with the little worlds created in each story - which, again, I don't have any trouble with in the short stories of King, Hill and Gaiman.
Tuesday, September 11, 2018
Mini book review: The Outsider by Stephen King
When well-liked youth coach Terry Maitland is arrested for a sadistic and gruesome murder, his community is shaken to its foundation. When Maitland's family and friends prove that he was literally in two places at the exact time of the murder, lead Detective Ralph Anderson doesn't know what to think. And when things get weirder - like supernaturally so - Anderson has to put his faith in evidence and police procedure aside and put his faith in things he cannot see.
The Outsider by Stephen King is a middling King novel, not his best but not his worst. The crimes committed are terrible but the villain himself is not super-scary. It has the return of Holly Gibney, a main character from the Bill Hodges trilogy of Mr. Mercedes / Finders Keepers / End of Watch, who uses her expertise in the world of the weird to help Ralph Anderson, while Anderson helps her re-engage with the world after Bill Hodges's death. The Outsider doesn't have the depth of characterization of those Bill Hodges books, though - for the first part of the book, I assumed Terry Maitland was going to be main character, not Detective Anderson, and I was a little surprise when the focus switched. This novel does have some nice call-backs to the Hodges books, however, and it was nice to see Holly again. Maybe I should re-read that trilogy.
The Outsider by Stephen King is a middling King novel, not his best but not his worst. The crimes committed are terrible but the villain himself is not super-scary. It has the return of Holly Gibney, a main character from the Bill Hodges trilogy of Mr. Mercedes / Finders Keepers / End of Watch, who uses her expertise in the world of the weird to help Ralph Anderson, while Anderson helps her re-engage with the world after Bill Hodges's death. The Outsider doesn't have the depth of characterization of those Bill Hodges books, though - for the first part of the book, I assumed Terry Maitland was going to be main character, not Detective Anderson, and I was a little surprise when the focus switched. This novel does have some nice call-backs to the Hodges books, however, and it was nice to see Holly again. Maybe I should re-read that trilogy.
Labels:
book review,
books,
fiction,
horror,
Stephen King
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