Horror Books


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Horror Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Horror
Fingerprints #1
Published in Kindle Edition by HarperCollins e-books (2001-11-27)
Author: Melinda Metz
List price: $4.99
New price: $3.99

Average review score:

Interesting Concept
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-24
Imagine being able to read the thoughts of others just by touching their fingerprints. Awesome, but freaky right? This series is about a girl named Rae with just that ability. This book documents the day she discovers her ability and how her lie changes afterwards. First of all, everyone back at her school thinks she's a nutcase. SEcond, she's being forced to go to group therapy (where she meets Anthony and Jesse who help her understand her gift). Third... someones out to kill her!

Great storyline, a little slow and frustrating for the reader who understands Rae's ability even though Rae, the narrator, does not. And I must warn you, although the early books in the series hint a relationship between Rae and Anthony, it won't develop until later on in the series... so stick with it. (thats the only reason I rated the book 4 stars)

Happy Reading!

TOTALLY AWSOME!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-29
Rae, a girl on the verge because she thinks she's going crazy starts out trying to ignore all of the weird thoughts that keep coming to her brain, that aren't hers. She thinks she's going insane, but in truth she's getting an amazing gift. With the help of Anthony, a guy she meets in her group meetings that are for stepping out of the thought of being crazy, she finally realizes what's happening to her. I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this series!!!! It is SSSSOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO good that you can't put it down and you simply HAVE to get through it without putting it down! That is something to say for me, because I've read so many good books out there. So PLEASE experience the feeling of going into Rae's mind and getting the feeling that makes you feel like you ARE the characters in the book! This series is a total MUST-READ!!!!!! So, what are you waiting for?!?!?!?!?!?!?! Go read it!!!! PLEASE!!!!

Can't put it down!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-04
The Fingerprints series has got to be one of the best series i've ever read! from the very beginning of book one, Gifted Touch, i can't put them down, even when i've read them so many times i've memorized them! They are the perfect combination of sci-fi, suspense, and romance, yet they still convince you that they could happen. melinda metz did a spectacular job writing these books! i reccomend them to anybody who loves a good cant-put-it-down read.

Awesome!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-27
Rae starts out as a normal teenager and she is living a pretty good life. That is until she starts having thoughts that are not hers. She begins to think that she is going crazy, like her mother did before she died in an insane asylum. Then finally Anthony, a guy she met at one of her support groups, figured out that she had a wonderful and amazing gift. But somebody doesnt like this whole amazing gift idea. They want Rae dead and fast. With her gift she starts to investigate who wants to kill her and why. Rae and Anthony go through sad, happy and angry times. These books are great because at the end of each book they leave you hanging so you cannot put it down, but you have to keep reading each book within a matter of days! I recommend this book to people of all ages. It doesnt even matter what kind of book you like, this one has mystery, suspense, romance, and fanstasy all put together. If I had to choose one book to read over and over again I would definitely choose this one!

Leaves you coming back for more
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-29
I own the whole Fingerprints series. It is literally impossible to read one and have no desire to read the others. You just have to. Rae finally resolves one problem, then at the end of the book another pops up. Melinda Metz keeps the reader feeling for Rae, rooting her on. And Anthony is adorable. The chemistry that Metz builds between the two is just right, and satisfies any hopeless romantics out there. The books should also satisfy those searching for mystery, suspense and good old science fiction. It's a great series, and definitely worth the time.

Horror
Sandman: Brief Lives (Book VII of The Sandman Collected Library)
Published in Hardcover by Vertigo (1999-03-01)
Author: Neil Gaiman
List price: $29.95
New price: $37.84
Used price: $11.49
Collectible price: $59.99

Average review score:

Great beginning but flops at the end
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-06
This is another great collection of Sandman stories which anyone who is a fan of the series should read. My only complaint with this collection is that the stories start out very strong but the ending is a bit of a flop. I am glad that I read it since this does contain events which will probably be of greater importance further along in the series.

Graphic SF Reader
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
Dream is sulking, until his sister Delirium motivates him to help her look for Destruction, their brother who has abdicated his Endless responsibilities.

On the way, through the various people they meet, and reflected in his servants and helpers, we see Dream's thought processes begin to change and mellow, even more so after he finally gets around to dealing with his son, Orpheus, after such long neglect.


A must read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
Read this series! I read these when they were published as individual comics and revisiting the series has been a joy. Read them in order if at all possilble. I wish Gaiman had the time to write another graphic novel series.

Change Makes The Sandman Impossibly Better
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-16
I thought Season of Mists was my favorite The Sandman volume until I read Brief Lives.

Brief Lives absolutely has it all--drama, action, comedy, romance, and philosophical ponderings. It focuses upon Morpheus rather directly--unlike other volumes where sometimes he exists within the stories only peripherally--as he helps his sister Delirium track down their brother known as Destruction.

Destruction is part of The Endless. The other members of The Endless are his brothers and sisters Destiny, Death, Dream (Morpheus), Desire, Despair, and Delirium. He long ago abandoned his post and family, choosing instead to exist on his own terms. Addle-brained Delirium unusually makes up her mind and decides she wants to reunite with her favorite brother. She is very surprised when she manages to enlist the aid of her brooding brother, Dream, especially after all her other brothers and sisters refuse to help her.

Dream accompanies Delirium on quite a journey as created by Neil Gaiman who makes brilliant use of legend and mythology, both preexisting and self-manufactured. They finally find Destruction, but things don't go exactly as expected and incredible possibilities are revealed.

I love this volume so much because something happens to Dream that hasn't really occurred in the previous volumes--he changes. While always dynamic in dialogue and appearance, Dream was not a character who seemed to evolve. I enjoyed Lord Morpheus just as he was, but now that Gaiman introduces a changing Dream, a Morpheus who suddenly empathizes with mortals and family members, he becomes all the more fascinating.

Furthermore, the afterward by Peter Straub was absolutely riveting. Brief Lives was enthralling on its own, but Straub's afterward analyzing the volume makes it, and the intricacies of Gaiman's artistry, all the more impressive.

~Scott William Foley, author of Souls Triumphant

"If this isn't literature, nothing is." --Peter Straub
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-29
This is one of my two favorites in the 11-volume "Sandman" series, which has proven Gaiman to be a genius storyteller. Three centuries ago, Destruction -- one of the seven Endless, who existed even before the gods -- abandoned his responsibilities, left his realm, and went off to do his own thing. Essentially, he ran away from home. Not that the world has lacked for destruction since then, but he's not behind it, anyway. Delirium, who has roughly the persona of a three-year-old combined with a drugged-out-flower child -- but is a very sweet person for all that (well, . . . not "person" . . .), misses her big brother and tries to find one of her siblings to help her look for him and convince him to return. Dream (the Sandman) finally agrees to accompany her, but for his own reasons, and the quest brings in a number of innocent bystanders (who suffer, as bystanders do), as well as an assortment of ancient but now out-of-work deities. A number of neat ideas are tossed out casually, too, like the notion that a few thousand people still exist on Earth from the very earliest days of civilization, or even from the dawn of the species.

Bernie the lawyer, killed by the collapsing wall of a derelict building, tells Death, "I did okay, didn't I? I lived fifteen thousand years. That's a pretty long time." To which Death, a pragmatic sort who resembles a Goth girl, replies, "You got what everybody gets, Bernie. You got a lifetime. No more, no less." Great stuff.

Horror
Vampire Chronicles: Interview with the Vampire, The Vampire Lestat, The Queen of the Damned (Anne Rice)
Published in Audio Cassette by Random House Audio (1992-11-17)
Author: Anne Rice
List price: $39.95
New price: $136.12
Used price: $10.97
Collectible price: $39.95

Average review score:

coffin box set
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-04
This coffin box Set Is a great addition to a collection of vampire Memorabilia . Open the lid (flap) to see who is inside. you can pick who is in the coffin, One is the child vampire and the other a dark haired male vampire.

The Best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-25
Anne Rice is the best modern writer on vampires. I have read them all and she rocks. The coolest scenarios and she reads like an intelligent airport paperback book writer. Her writing goes down easy like a comic book. I have written a book on vampires too if you are interested. It's called Seamus and Emer. It's available on Amazon so take a look. Good Luck! Bye Bye!

Sink your teeth into this...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-07
... a fine set of Vampire Chronicles by Anne Rice. What a refreshing point of view and burning light to see vampires in. Rice gives us vampires with feelings - why shouldn't a vampire feel joy, pain and regret? Yes, bottom line is they are merciless killers, but this is the all-too often typecast image of vampires that Hollywood likes to betray. These immortals don't just sweep in with a dramatic flare of their capes (most of the time they don't even wear one), kill then leave - we experience their agony, hunger, happiness and turmoil before and after each kill. Anne Rice gives us so much more - imagine YOUR fears, regrets and hopes from your lifetime spread over an eternity. Would you really want immortality? What is right and what is wrong? Good and evil? The devil and God? Leave your humdrum life behind for a while and bury yourself (literally) in a world of fascinating, real characters in sumtuous, historic or sordid surroundings. Enjoy, but remember to put the lid back across when you're finished...

Vampire Chronicles 1-3
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-10
I would have preferred to have been able to buy these audio books on cd; however, they were unavailable. Since I had read them all so long ago, it was time to delve back into them. Buying audio books to bring on vacation, was the perfect idea! (I didn't have to worry about getting any suntan lotion on the pages!)

Interview With The Vampire
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-10
I knew about Anne Rice, but I had never read any of her books before. I read Interview With The Vampire, and I couldn't put it down! It's one of the best books I've ever read. Now I'm reading the whole set. It was great!

Horror
Whispers from the Past (Charmed)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Simon Spotlight Entertainment (2000-06-01)
Author: Rosalind Noonan
List price: $6.99
New price: $1.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

So little Time
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-23
Hi, how are you all? Well I know this book is wonderful! Acually i never read the book charmed but i did read the book so little time, which is by the same author. That was a very good book. So if that was a good book that she wote then this should be good also. The book is very intersting and tells you alot of information and some good heads up and tips. Kids my age would like the book, i would belive..... I might not be giving alot of information right now but the more information you want is right inside the book. So i would suggest to read the book and i think you will injoy it! I also think Charmed is a good book to read too.!.!.!.!.! Well i hope i at least helped you out a little bit. And i hope you read BOTH books because reading is good for you , and just enjoy them! Thank you for taking your time out to read this.

Excellent time-travel story - involving my second fave witch, Phoebe
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-21
I have a penchant for time-travel stories, as they are striking, interesting, not to mention compelling. This book is inevitably one of them. Phoebe being abducted into past by a time-demon during the times of the Salem Witch Trials was huge (amazing)!! I'm not going to reveal details of the story, but what I don't get is that how on earth could the Charmed Ones use their powers in the past, and how the Law of no coincidences is oblivious to the author.


But as this is not the tv show, I suppose authors are able to use their imagination freely. My fave bit of this book is how Piper and Prue was under the evil influence of the root tea Prudence drank, given by Hugh, and they acquired amazing powers, which included being "evil" themselves and coming in handy to rescue their sister. I especially like the fact that Prudence did not succumb to the tainted root tea to nearly kill her own descendant, as the power of good always prevails!!! Also, its nice to involve the Charmed Ones' ancestor to this book, as readers somewhat know more about certain witches from the Warren line. Rosalind Noonan did a good job portraying each sister's characters, and how all their different and unique personalities combined together can pack a huge wallop. True to the series, with dry humour added and the Power of Three situation makes Whispers from the Past all the more enjoyable. And the fact that poor Phoebe, despite "stuck playing cinderella", she was determined to stay focused on the path to solving the problem, is also rather warmth-evoking.

In a nutshell: If you like Charmed, there's no doubt you will like this book. Not as excellent as Soul of the Bride, but close. One of my all-time faves. Well worth it!!!

Phoebe Story Finally
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-07
Finally, a Phoebe episode [well book] that any Charmed fan can get behind. It's a time travel piece and a family get-together. Need I say more?

Another great Charmed book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-23
Fantastic addition to the Charmed series :) Not as good as 'Soul of the Bride' but up there with the best of the books.

I always love a good time-travel story if it's: 1) Well-Written, 2) Believeable. This book gets it on both counts.

The evil piper/prue angle was kinda amusing *ducks* The new powers they got were awesome too (though Piper's was kind of an extension on her stopping tme power)

This book does have a couple errors (Girls using their powers in the past to get home) but considering these books aren't written as fast as the series is ('least most of them seem that way)... we need to give the author's a break. We can't expect them to keep up with the pace/storylines of the show.

Considering SOME of the storylines 'Charmed' has taken, maybe the creators should look to some of these books for plot ideas.

I hope Miss Noonan puts in another contribution to the Charmed series again sometime.

Whispers from the past..
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-12
This was the very first Charmed book I read and it was solid. I have now watched every episode of every season and there were no holes in it. I love all episodes that the sisters go back in time or forward or relive memories etc. If you are like me, then you will love this book too!

Horror
Demonata #1, The: Lord Loss: Book 1 in the Demonata series (Demonata)
Published in Hardcover by Little, Brown Young Readers (2005-10-05)
Author: Darren Shan
List price: $15.99
New price: $4.89
Used price: $0.25

Average review score:

Gory horror for young adults
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
First book in the Demonata series.

Grubitsch "Grubbs" Grady goes to live with his Uncle Dervish in a creepy old mansion after his parents and sister are torn to shreds by an evil demon named Lord Loss and his familiars, Vein and Artery. Grubbs witnesses the gory scene, but escapes by tapping into a magical ability he never knew he possessed. Once in his uncle's house, Grubbs learns more than he ever wanted to know about the Grady family curse, which involves werewolves, demons, and chess.

A Terrifyingly Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-22
Lord Loss is an exciting fantasy/horror story, filled with suspense that left me wanting to read more. After his parents are killed by the demon master, Lord Loss, a teenage is introduced into a world of demons and magic by his uncle. I think a lot of teenagers would enjoy reading this book. Darren Shan uses every word in the book to describe the characters, the thing around them, and their feelings. The story is completely unpredictable and I was left reading chapteer after chapter, The characters are realistic and I can relate to what they feel. I gave this book a 4 out of 5. It is one of my favorite books because of how the story is told which so much detail in every sentence.

Bloodely Delicous: Lord Loss
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
Demonata
Book 1: Lord Loss

This story starts off with this one kid and his family who absolutely loves chess. They play a game every night and they are the best of the state and know one can beat them. Grubbs (Grubitsch) Grady doesn't get why his family has to play chess so much. He doesn't get why it's so important to the family, but soon, very soon he will find out the truth.
Grubbs family went out of town to a ballet Grubbs spends the night at his aunt's house for the night. But Grubbs was too curious to let his family treating him differently unnoticed. He sneaks out of his grandma's house to see what id really going on.
He finally gets to his house and his parents vehicles are still there. His front door was unlocked so he went in. The whole house was unusually cold. Every chess set that was in the house was broken and skewed around the house. The only light on in the house was in his room. Grubbs never learned what curiosity killed the cat meant until now.
When Grubbs opens the door to his room all he sees is blood stained walls and the demon artery eating his sister alive and the other demon Vein chewing alive his mom.
That's just the beginning, if you like horror books and demons and werewolves, this is the book for you. There's a lot more to this book than what you just read and it get's much, much better than the beginning is.
This book comes close to being just as good as the Cirque De Freak, but it's not quite there yet.

Best aouthor ever
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-30
Another must read seires by Darren Shan This book is awsome its about demons and everything magical but mustly demons u will be itchting for the next book after u read Lord Loss

OH MY QUITE A SCARY NOVEL!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-24
THIS BOOK SENDS SHIVERS DOWN MY SPINE!!!!!


P.S. BUY OR LISTEN TO THE BAND RAMMSTEIN!!!!!!!!!

(IT'S A GREAT BAND!!!)

Horror
Hart's Hope
Published in Hardcover by Severn House Publishers (1994-02)
Author: Orson Scott Card
List price: $20.00
Used price: $67.59

Average review score:

Good, dark fairytale with a somewhat weak ending.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-03
I have a hard time deciding what to write here. Orson Scott Card is able to write passages that literally take my breath away. There was one in "Ender's Game" and there was one at the end of a chapter in this book (you'll probably know it when you read it, and rather than spoil it I'll merely say it reminded me of the famous "For want of a nail the kingdom was lost" bit).

Make no mistake, this is a dark fairy tale. While he doesn't go into overly graphic details, he gives enough so that the reader can clearly 'see' what's happening. There's blood, sex and violence (sometimes all three at once) throughout. The characters are memorable. The writing is clear and sharp. The connections between the main characters are somewhat complicated, making them even more interesting. I felt the choice of 'summarizing' the chapter in the voice of the narrator, at the beginning of each chapter, to be a somewhat odd choice. In many respects this ties into the ending, but it removes much of the suspense. Still, there were other twists that kept things fresh.

Two things kept me from giving it 5 stars. The first is that the book meandered a bit in the middle. Yes, most of the meandering had elements in it that became important later, but the flow bogged down a bit.

But the ending failed for me and is what kept me from giving it 5 stars. There were a couple of elements here. The first was quite simply a typo in the very last paragraph that forced me to stop to see if I'd misunderstood the thrust of the sentence. I hadn't, but it broke the flow of a well written piece of writing.

*mild spoiler alert*




The book also tried to throw a twist in at the very end. The interesting thing is, I'd been thinking about the twist beforehand because I'd just discussed a similar concept with a friend about the use of the 2nd person 'voice' in writing. It was a clever idea, but the execution just didn't work for me, mainly because I never 'identified' with the character I was supposed to, to make it work properly. Now, maybe Card just meant for the reader to feel like he/she was reading a story written, rather than hearing a story spoken, in which case it may have worked better. But I ended with the latter impression not the former, and it just didn't mesh.

Finally, the story introduced a couple of characters as friends of one of the main characters, but they were almost completely absent at the climax and were brought up again briefly at the very end making me wonder where they were at the climax itself.



* end mild spoilers *



This was still a very good book, and had a couple of clever writing ideas, but the problems (or at least what I perceived as such) dragged it down a notch.

one worth re-reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-22
Burland's king Nasilee's reign is destroying the country, so Palicroval is urged to overthrow him for the good of the country.

He defeats Nasilee. Then, to solidify his position, he takes Nasilee's young daughter Asineth as a bride, publicly consummating the marriage (rape, in other words) so there's no doubt. He can't, however, bring himself to kill her, though his advisors all agree he should. Instead, he sends her away with the wizard Sleeve, and turns to Enziquelvinisensee Evelvenin, the most beautiful woman in the world, whose hand he'd won before his quest.

Asineth, bitter and bent on revenge, is pregnant with Palicroval's child, which ends up being a 10-month baby--magically significant. She sacrifices the child and uses it to become Queen Beauty, turning Sleeve into a court jester and taking Enziquelvinisensee Evelvenin's appearance for herself, turning the real Enziquelvinisensee Evelvenin into a hag.

She returns to the capital and takes over, allowing Palicroval to go anywhere in the land but the capital. She magically watches him and torments him for her amusement.

Finally, the gods take a hand and cause Palicroval to father a child, Orem, whose task, though he's unaware of it, is to set things right.

This is a rather unusually written story--told as an epistle to Palicroval, with the epistle-writer's commentary and advice along with the narrative. It took me a while to get used to the style, but once I did, it added to the feel of the story. It's distant--the omniscient POV doesn't allow the reader deeply into any of the characters' thoughts or emotions--but the story is epic in scale, spanning centuries and involving gods and the fate of a nation; and it's a morality tale as well, so the style fits the story.

The action is gritty, from the rape to the torments Queen Beauty visits on Palicroval, to the events Orem endures on his unknowing quest. Nothing is sugar-coated or coyly avoided, and that too serves the story, showing how even good intentions can result in evil and victims become villains.

And it shows the dangers of attracting the attention of the gods. Isn't there a famous saying about that? Or perhaps its just a truism. The gods' intervention led to the changing fortunes of Palicroval, and the existence and eventual fate of Orem.

It's not that much of a spoiler to say that the ending is open-ended. That, too, serves the story, giving a reason for the epistle to Palicroval.

I'll be re-reading this one more than once, I'm sure.

Pretty bleeding good
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-03
My only complaint was an annoying sticker on the cover, but I got it to come off with minimal residue. Overall, a solid, strong service. Average speed but great quality of the product itself.

Card's Classic Fantasy...Brilliant!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-14
In typical Orson Scott Card fashion, Hart's Hope does not disappoint. One of the things I love about Card is that each one of his books are entirely different, yet they are instantly identifiable as a book that he authored. What's even better is that he always exceeds my expectations. I could build up a book of his in my head for five years, and it would still be better than I could ever imagine. The man is magical with a pen (or a computer) and with Hart's Hope, he has written a truly magical tale.

Orson Scott Card has describe Hart's Hope as the most classic fantasy novel he has written, meaning that the book holds all the elements of a traditional fantasy. It takes place during an unstated time, yet seems medieval in fashion. It involves magic, sorcerers, kingdoms lost, kingdoms fought for, kingdoms saved, vengeance, and kings and queens. It's quite the epic novel wrapped up into a little under 300 pages.

Hart's Hope is the story of Orem, the unknown son of the king, Palicroval. Palicroval has killed the current king and taken the king's daughter as his wife. The king's daughter then decides to take vengeance and becomes Queen Beauty through a truly horrifying ritual of blood and sorcery. Queen Beauty in turn has put the king, Palicroval under a horrible spell and sees his every move. The Hart is a stag of 100 horns, a god of power. The Hart leads Palicroval to a woman who fathers Palicroval's son, though Palicroval is unaware of it. The child is named Orem and has powers that are unknown to anyone, even to himself. All of these storylines interweave into a very complex but surprisingly easy to understand plot that takes us on a truly magical, wondrous, and at times horrifyingly graphic, yet beautiful story.

As I mentioned in a previous post, I've never been disappointed with Card. I've read nearly his whole library and find it very hard to rank books of his in order of which I like best, though I must admit that my favorite book of his is still Speaker For The Dead, the sequel to Ender's Game. The great thing about Card's novels is the love we feel for his characters. He has a gift of bringing a touch of humanity to all of his characters. I care about his characters like no other author's. Hart's Hope was no exception.

I enjoyed this one very much and would recommend it to any fans of fantasy. And for those that aren't crazy about that genre, you may still like this book. The writing and the story itself stand alone without being classified into a genre. Beautiful book!

A Strong Modern Yet Classic Fairy Tale
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-06
This book was a complete surprise. I have been reading Orson Scott Card for about the last 15 years, but this amazing little book is quite a wonderful departure.

"Hart's Hope" reminds me of a classic, non-politically correct fairy tale with violence, magic and allegory. Underlying the story are the questions of what is good and evil as well as the power of words and the wonder of making and unmaking. These are classic themes but expressed in such a strong inventive voice.

Since this book is a pretty quick read, I am actually considering going back and re-reading this because I was really intrigued with the way Card plays with the different religions and Gods who are so real in the world of this novel that they have their own faults.

This is a fantasic fantasy read, unlike anything I have read in quite some time and very different from anything from OSC. Highly suggest this one.

Horror
Call Of Cthulhu: Horror Roleplaying In the Worlds Of H.P. Lovecraft (5.5 Edition / Version 5.5)
Published in Paperback by Chaosium (1998-01-01)
Authors: Sandy Petersen and Lynn Willis
List price: $29.95
Used price: $7.82

Average review score:

ia ia Cthulhu fhtagn!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-19
I have been gaming for over 15 years, ond only recently picked this up and played at a con. I love it. It's simple, easy to learn and play, and has an inherent flexibilty that makes it easy for Keeper's to make a judgement call on events not covered in the rules. (When in doubt, the Luck roll is a good bet).

If you want real horror, ignore the WoD and make it Cthulhu!

Useful even to non-lovecraft fans...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-03
The Call of Cthulhu system, as written in the 5.5 and 6.0 versions, is one of the most complete systems I've ever found.

That is amazing, considering exactly how LITE the rules system is. There are very few hard and fast rules, with almost everything being handled by percentile dice. The system is very organic, with characters increasing in skill by performing them.

The characters in a Call of Cthulhu game are more 'real' than some similar games from other companies. They have a great sense of depth due to the occupation system used. Also, considering how lethal combat is in the game, you are greatly encouraged to think your way out of problems.

One other area that has been found by my group to be important is the ease of transfer from one 'style' of play to another. Whenever we are wanting to run any type of realistic game set in any era, we always look to the Call of Cthulhu rulebook for ideas. So far, we have run a wild west game and several other genres using the rules in this book.

In his house at R'lyeh, dead Cthulhu waits dreaming...
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-22
The works of master horror writer H.P. Lovecraft of the 1920s have influenced almost every single good horror writer to date, from Ann Rice to Stephen King. COC is likely the best RPG ever put to print, and the publisher Chaosium just makes things easier for players by adding content from their various supplements with each new edition. A typical game session has your characters snooping around for clues, and interrogating various NPCs (non player characters), and then implementing a course of action. The climax of a campaign also often (unfortunately for players) includes one of the hideous deities of the Cthulhu Mythos, such as Azathoth, Cthulhu himself, Dagon, or, possibly the worst, Nyarlathotep, trickster god with a thousand avatars or "masks". COC is the only game that has ever given me, as the gamemaster, chills reading a supplement in the middle of the day. I also recommend picking up one of the numerous Cthulhu Mythos anthologies of short stories. Prepare to be scared

An Unforgetable Experience
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-11
I first read these tales in an "Armed Services Edition" of HP Lovecraft stories, back in 1944! Sitting underseas in a US Navy Submarine in the South Pacific, scared to death, and lonely for home, these stories gripped me so completely, I forgot my real fears of war.

That old book, now tattered and yellowed with age, was read by my son and daughter, who now want to pass it on to my grandchildren. It's time for me to replace it with a new Penguin edition before is falls apart, totally!

Lovecraft's writing has many weaknesses, flowery language, poor characterizations and vague plots. I see all these faults now, but they never bothered me when I first read him. Women don't seem to be a part of Lovecraft's world, and that is a shame. His stories were too short to correct these faults. Modern full novels, in the Lovecraft tradition, like "The Riddle of Cthulhu," are written with many of HPL's faults corrected; like the inclusion, for example, of unforgetable characters, romance and a believable plot. Still, the "Call" is the source and the classic horror book. You must experience these classic stories, then move on to today's modern "Lovecraft Style" novels!

Yet another 5-star review
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-13
Doesn't it tell you something, that *every* review for this edition of this book gives it 5 stars? (Some of the out-of-print editions have reviews here too.) And let's face it, us RPG enthusiasts are not the sort of folks to shy away from criticizing.

Some people will say the Basic Roleplaying rule-set is outdated. It's true that games like Unknown Armies and Godlike are pretty cool, and I know people who are using those rules for their CoC games. But just try introducing a newcomer to those rules, or getting someone who's only played D&D before to convert. They get dizzy, I tell you. Nope, for a simple, elegant rule-set that just about anyone can grasp right off the bat, Call of Cthulhu's Basic Roleplaying has still got it, after more than 20 years. The rules fade into the background, where they belong.

And unlike other games with their multivolume core rulebooks and endless splatbooks that you *need* if you want a fully fleshed-out campaign, everything you really need is right there in this one rulebook. Heck, every time Chaosium does a new edition, they comb all the supplements for spells, monsters, skills, and so on, and add them into the new edition--to save you time and money! Chaosium even printed the entire short story, "The Call of Cthulhu," in this edition, so newbies can get a taste of what it's all about.

If you've got an older edition of CoC, you don't need to buy this one--the rule changes are quite minor. Unlike D&D, a new edition doesn't make everything you already know obsolete--"editions" of CoC are back-compatible with older editions and old supplements. Chaosium does new editions to keep the book in print and to make it a little better every time, not to force the fans to spend money. I bought it because my old book was getting worn out, and I wanted a more durable hardcover edition. Now I can loan out the old book to players. But I'm really happy with the little changes, and it's nice to have some of the information that used to be in adventures and supplements all gathered together in one book.

Horror
V.O.
Published in Digital by Amazon (2006-01-30)
Author: Betty Dravis
List price: $0.49
New price: $0.49

Average review score:

Not a Short Story - A Short Novel
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-01
V. O. is a short story by Betty Dravis, who is without a doubt an extremely talented author. In just eight short pages, she manages to weave a tale that grabs you quickly, draws you in, makes you care, and keeps you on the edge of your seat. In less than 15 minutes, I felt like I had read a full novel.

Clearly, this story is fast-paced, yet Ms. Dravis' crisp, succinct prose provides you with a level of detail not normally seen in a short story. The plot is immediately intriguing and suspenseful; I couldn't put it down.

I strongly recommend this clever tale for all fans of horror, mystery, or plot twists with surprise endings. While I had a pretty good idea of what was going to happen, this excellent narrative crafted by Ms. Dravis kept me enthralled until the very end.

It Works!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
The theme for V.O. by author Betty Dravis is not a new one. It has been explored through the ages in story form, both oral and written. There have been mythologies woven around the concept that forms the plot.

However the similarities in theme, Dravis takes it a step beyond into a more macabre setting with undertones of eroticism fueling the engine which drives the story. Understand that there is nothing overt with regards to sexuality in the story, rather it is something that simmers below the surface as implied, more than realized.

Virgins have played various central roles in sacrificial settings from time immemorial. Here, they are no less innocent nor unassuming for the positions they accept in this bizarre ritual which would drive the less greedy, the less gluttonous to the brink of insanity. Have a read and feel the fear creep up on you when the curtain is pulled back to reveal the climatic discovery of the story.

Selling your soul to ancient and evil magic
Helpful Votes: 31 out of 57 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-05
Have you ever sold your soul to the devil? Once you know what the deal is, you may want to, but don't do it. This both erotic and creepy tale is about getting your health and your youth back with all its pleasures, but at a price that only the soulless can live with. If it sounds too good to be true and it is still true, then there is a dark secret hidden in the deal. I think I am good at solving puzzles and problems but I did not see the disturbing end coming. All my guesses were wrong.

Betty Dravis is an extremely skilled author and narrator with an incredible imagination. The dialogue flows quickly and smoothly, while the story steadily increases in tension without any interruptions in the suspense. Then suddenly the concluding shock knocks you over, and the story ends leaving you with disturbing thoughts that you have to get rid of before bed time. If this novel was a piece of music it would be Maurice Ravels' Bolero, and it takes about the same time to read as it takes to listen to Bolero. With this short story Betty Dravis is breaking new ground in the horror genre. Don't sell your soul to ancient and evil magic, but get a taste of it by reading this short story. V.O. is an excellent and bone chilling read for both horror aficionados and horror newbie's.

Move Over Stephen King!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-30
Charles, a respected banker in his sixties, takes a cruise with his wife and upon his return looks and acts much younger, as does his wife, who is now pregnant. When his elderly friend Walter inquires about this dramatic transformation, Charles tells him it lies with V.O. Asked to explain further, Charles swears Walter to secrecy and tells him about the cruise, where he and his wife were taken to a private room and there the most beautiful man and woman they had ever seen danced for them, culminating in the best meal they had ever eaten. Curious as to the mystery ingredient that made the meal so wonderful, they are simply told it is V.O. Walter, upon sponsorship by Charles, takes the cruise with his wife, and upon his return, Charles notes a dramatic improvement in his physical being, but is puzzled by Walter's reluctant happiness over his transformation. It seems Walter figured out what V.O. means, and the reality of that is most horrible indeed.

Betty Dravis stands in the forefront as bestselling author of romance, mystery, and children's books. Now she joins the ranks of Stephen King as writer of horror. With the ability to incorporate such a brilliant plot -- which I'm sure King would have carried forward over 300 pages -- into a concise, well-written short story, speaks volumes of her talent. This is the first short story I've downloaded from Amazon and I've since ordered all written by Ms. Dravis, who has the unique ability to deliver a galvanizing plot which moves quickly, ending with a twist the reader does not see coming. Bravo!







It takes a very special skill to craft a convincing short story!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-14
In the space of 10,000 to 15,000 words - what for a novel would be a mere one or two chapters serving as little more than introduction - a skilled short story author has to create characters, setting, atmosphere, tension, action, dialogue, plot, resolution and dénouement. A pretty tall order for any author but Betty Dravis is clearly up to the task!

V.O. is a catchy little horror story that leaps off the springboard of the typical human desire for physical beauty and longevity and deals with the consequences of what might be called the archetypical "deal with the devil".

The plot is simple enough and it's driven forward with Dravis's clever use of convincing dialogue. The eroticism in the protagonist's explanation of his experiences is thick and palpable - quite convincing enough to raise a mild sheen of sweat on any reader's brow that has a full set of hormones on board and is willing to allow their imagination to run away with the compelling words that Dravis puts in front of us.

Want to spend an enjoyable 10 minutes that will whisk you away from whatever you're doing? Read Betty Dravis's V.O.

Paul Weiss

Horror
The Dark Visions Collector's Edition: (The Strange Power/The Possessed/The Passion)
Published in Paperback by Simon Pulse (1998-11-01)
Author: L.J. Smith
List price: $6.99
Used price: $22.89

Average review score:

Dark Visions
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-20
I have read this book so many time and it still doesn't get old.

Great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
I have always been an avid fan of LJ Smith, so I was not surprised that this series was awesome. Her descriptions are always so clear (and so strange) that you can almost envision the people and things in front of you (unlike everyone else though I loved Rob more than Gabriel). As an adult now, I still read her books (although I have yet to find the last book of the Nightworld Series). A great read for anyone!!!!!!!

Good but not great
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-07
Whilst LJ Smith's books are a good read, I do get narked with the characters sometimes. Most of the lead characters are too nice and any 'bad' characters are always gothy and into heavy metal. Goodie is sickly sweet and oh so nice blonde, baddie is hot but very nasty brunette (see how easy it is to follow the plot read the secret circle if you don't believe me) But back to this, this had a great starting point, but lost the plot slighty. LJS seemed to be really hitting us on the head with how 'bad' Gabriel was and how nice everyone else was, and of course the main female is so understanding and desired by all. Liked it but not as much as the Forbidden Game.

Dark Visions: The Strange Power, the Possessed, the Passion
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-10
I had read several of L.J.Smith's Nightworld series when I read Dark Visions, and I was immediately spellbound. The characters were all well-developed and very appealing - you cared what happened to them. Of course, Gabriel was my favorite. There's something so appealing about a bad boy in need of salvation. I read the whole thing through in one sitting and then sat down and read it through again. I would recommend it for anyone interested in the unknown, in coming-of-age books, or just interested in a good read.

I didn't know God himself wrote books!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-10
This book is by FAR my favorite book of all time. Kaitlyn Fairchild is my new favorite female character. Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings... Yeah, they don't hold a candle to L.J. Smith's Dark Visions Collector's Edition.
Personally, I am AMAZED that this book doesn't get more recognition than it currently does. I would enjoy it more than life itself if this book became a movie. I'm actually telling all my friends about it.
I am not much of a reader... at all... But this book... This book made me cry, made me laugh, made me think hard on certain subjects... everything. I loaned my copy to a friend in hopes of getting her hooked on it too.
I have read and re-read this book, time and time again, for years. It never gets old. Smith's vivid descriptions of surroundings and characteristics give me a good mental image of all her characters.
I am seriously thinking about getting her other books. In fact, I will.
Read this book. If you think you knew what a good book is... you haven't read anything until you read this.

Horror
The Last Apprentice (Revenge of the Witch)
Published in Paperback by HarperTrophy (2006-08-01)
Author: Joseph Delaney
List price: $7.99
New price: $2.74
Used price: $1.59

Average review score:

scariest book ever
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-14
This is a very scary book and if your not up to be scared then don't read. I read this book in in about two days and I thought it was awesome. Ages 10 to 80 well I read it when I was 9 but I've seen many other disturbing and scary things before it.

Last Apprentice
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
It was a great young readers book, grandma approved wish there where more to come

Revenge of the Witch rules!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-13
I just finished reading Revenge of the Witch about four days ago and it is probaly the best book I've ever read! The book never allows you to take a breath, and it's even harder to put down. If you want an exciting,creepy,suspenseful,and just an all-around good book, this is the book for you.

The book starts out with a twelve-year-old boy named Thomas Ward being accepted by the spook to go on a one month trial to see if he is up to the job. The spook wants Tom to spend the night in a haunted house to see what he's made of. After the night in the haunted house Tom goes to the spook's house and starts his training as a spook. Tom learns all about witches and boggarts,(mostly boggarts because he is only in his first year of training,)and even meets a witch named Mother Malkin. The spook keeps Mother Malkin in a pit in the ground so she can't cause any more mischief in the County, but eventually she gets out while the spook is away and Tom goes after her. Tom finds her by the riverbank and kills her. Now that she's dead she can possess another person's body, which makes her hard to spot. Toward the end of the book, Tom goes to visit his family for certain reasons and finds out that Mother Malkin is somewhere in the house and could be anyone, and she wants revenge!!!!! Can Tom stop Mother Malkin and save his family? Will Tom even survive? Your going to have to read the book to find out!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Outstanding...Chilling...Spellbinding...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-23
This book is just an outstanding piece of work. Delaney should be lauded for his imagination and brilliance. He has created a dark tale that is actually fun to read. The flow of the story keeps you guessing what is going to happen in the next chapter so that it is difficult to put the book down.
Delaney also has the knack for keeping the reader off-balance with his character and story development. The author definitely closes out the story by the end of the book, but the reader is still left guessing how things are going to turn out for the young Tom Ward.
Well, it looks like I'm going to have to read the next book and the next...

Ripping good story overlays misogyny, dark view of humanity.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-19
Having read the first three books in this series, I enjoyed the tales of the last apprentice to the Spook, as they fight off the dark in a place called the County, a cold and threatening land of witches, boggarts, and other evils.

But I read these to see if I wanted my son reading them, and I do not. There is a strong streak of misogyny running through these books. All the women of any importance to the stories are witches, some are in-human, none are to be fully trusted. The women in this book might be loved, but are not lovable... One is left with a belief that a witch must be put in a hole in the ground... even the apprentice's mother is full of secrets and darkened mysteries.

There is also strong anti-clericalism, which is less objectionable, but still not entirely palatable for a young man to be reading. The result is a dark vision of humanity, occasionally rescued by the vibrancy of the writing and the stirring narrative.

If you want your child to have a clouded view of women, then this is a well written and ripping good set of tales for your young child. I decided not.


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