Horror Books


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

Horror
Auctioneer
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (1976-01-15)
Author: Joan samson
List price: $7.95
New price: $64.65
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

shattering
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-31
absoute evil,this book will slowly but surely curdle your blood.dynamite from start to finish,with an ending you will not forget.

I'd give it 6 stars
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-03
They only let me give it 5 stars, so that's what I'm giving it. There's no product description on this book right now, so from the back cover : "Harrowing tensions explode in a series of events that could happen anywhere, to anyone, just as they do to John Moore - whose days of freedom run out, who is stripped of his possessions, his courage, and his hopes, by the ominous presence of a stranger impossible to resist."

On the acres outside Harlowe that have been owned by several generations of Moores, John and Mim take care of his mother, raise their daughter and live life close to the land they love. One Thursday, when the local law, a one-man force, comes calling for donations to an auction to benefit the police, they laugh but donate. The Auctioneer is Perly Dunsmore, a worldly man who suddenly descends on quiet, sleepy Harlowe. As Thursday after Thursday passes, the requests for donations turn to demands and Harlowe's police force grows along with the power Dunsmore has over the town. What the townspeople end up giving goes far beyond the old furniture and rusty tools of the first auction. How far they have to be pushed before they fight back will shock you.

This book is truly a horror story and, if you begin by thinking this sort of thing could never happen, as you read, you'll be shocked at how easily it unfolds. The cover says "soon to be a major motion picture" - I don't think that ever happened, but it would make a great movie!

the auctioneer
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-09

I read this book about a year or so ago, and I still get upset when I think about it. I know some people that are like the ones in that little town, That would just sit and let things happen to them. Perfect example is, the Middle East, where the people there have let evil (Alchaida,and the Taliban)come and slowly take over until they became the law that everyone feared. I urge you to read this book, you will never forget it!

Could it happen today?
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-08
Read this book, if you can find a copy. Buy a used copy, borrow it from someone, or obtain a copy of this book at your local library. It's a fairly fast read, and riveting. A novel, yes ... but you can't help but wonder, "Could it happen today? In the 21st Century?" I encourage high school English teachers to not only read this book, but find a way for their class to read it and discuss it. This book is (IMHO) a modern day classic. The implications, lessons, and warnings inherent in this story are applicable, even today ... decades after the story was set in a fictitious small town in New Hampshire in the late '60's. Topics that could be discussed and touched on are: bullies, extortion, and the expression: "All that is needed for evil to flourish is for good men to do nothing." For a good scare that will leave you pondering human nature: READ THIS BOOK!

Horror
Awash in the Blood
Published in Hardcover by Hawk Publishing Group (2001-11)
Author: John Wooley
List price: $23.95
New price: $2.63
Used price: $0.99

Average review score:

Sleeping will be harder now....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-28
I've just finished John Wooley's AWASH IN THE BLOOD, and I'm still feeling tingly and a little numb from the power of this work.

Televangelist Mo Johnson is a bit more interested in being the center of attention than in spreading the Word. Newly divorced, he can't get his mind off his attractive producer as his television ministry travels across Romania into the area known as Transylvania. While he sleeps in an ancient hotel, he is suddenly attacked by a man-like creature that leaves him with a severe bite on the neck. Johnston, knowing a great opportunity for a "show" when he sees one, immediately orders his producer to start taping. He believes he has fought Satan and won!

But, he hasn't won. As the infection from the bite slowly turns Johnston into a vampire, his little true faith is perverted into a belief in himself as the savior of the world. HE can now give the gift of eternal life. All it takes is a little bite on the neck.

Johnson journeys from minister to brutal vampire then ultimately to a struggle toward salvation for those he has hurt and perhaps for himself. Wooley's tale of the fight between good and evil takes mankind's nightmares and makes them terrifyingly believable. I wonder if I can get a cross made out of garlic to hang around my neck when I sleep...

Gary Campbell, author of THE FOUR CONDITIONS

A Modern Gothic Masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-18
Horror-meister Stephen King tells readers in his autobiographical segment of On Writing that his novels seem to sprout from two unrelated ideas that kind of collide and bang! Pow! Form a new idea. The plot of Tulsa author John Wooley's new novel, Awash in the Blood, seems much like King's signature bricolage, only here it's Vampires and T.V. Preachers. Pow! Bang! With this strange combination, Wooley manages to craft a tale of utmost Gothic realism, a real spine-tingling trip into the macabre and a worthy addition to the vampire genre.

On a vacation-cum-missionary trip to Transylvania, the Reverend Mo Johnston, a second-rate T.V. preacher, saves a lot of souls for his show's "Hallelujah, Not Halloween" series. Unfortunately, on his last night in the Old World, some kind of creature breaks into his room and bites Johnston - yup - on the neck. Sporting some new wounds, Johnston heads home and convinces himself - and his television audience - that he's done battle with the Devil himself and won. Except, he's not so sure that he's won. His sexual attraction to Alicia, his female assistant, and other women, begins to override the more Godly parts of his mind, and Johnston becomes convinced that perhaps his vampirism isn't a Satanic curse, but instead a gift from God.

Wooley's done his research here, both into the glam-and-sham world of T.V. preaching in the evangelical, conservative, Protestant tradition and into vampire myths and other Gothic novels. Unlike what passes as Gothic horror these days, Blood is devoid of stupid kids wearing black makeup, combat boots, and listening to Marilyn Manson and KMFDM. It takes the Gothic horror novel back to its roots, weaving a story of love, passion, religion, and the supernatural that's plausible enough to believe but scary enough to make you turn the lights on. It's a subtle kind of horror, one that comes out in the wee hours of the morning and taps you on the shoulder and, when you turn around, there's nothing there. Creepy stuff indeed.

Blood also draws some interesting parallels between the emotions and passions aroused in Pentecostal-style worship services (or ceremonies in any religion that involve mystic actions, for those who are keeping score), and that's part of what makes Blood such a poignant read: it's a world not so far removed from our own experiences, and if it happens to Mo Johnston, it could happen to us. Sure, he's no Lestat, but Johnston could be his younger brother. Awash in the Blood belongs on the horror connoisseur's shelf right next to literature by Anne Rice and H.P. Lovecraft, and as far away from the repulsive dung that passes as "Gothic" horror these days as it can get.

What If?
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-24
What if? In a world filled with an abundance of diverse religions there is one thread of commonality that binds them together: The search for eternal life. To be sure there are differing views on how to achieve this goal but eternal life remains the ultimate goal. What if I was to tell you that a man of the cloth had discovered a way to deliver eternal life and that it involved a triumph of dark over light? What if I told you this road to salvation led to Satan disguised as vampires and that which appears to be a satanic curse is really a gift from God? Unbelievable you say? Meet the Reverend Mo Johnston.
Mo Johnston is a televangelist that experiences a rather unusual encounter on his final night in Eastern Europe, Transylvania to be specific, where he has gone to collect materials for his TV ministry. He is attacked by a creature that the local authorities believe to be a vampire. Johnston determines it was Satan and returns home to exhibit the puncture marks in his neck and to convince his followers that he has encountered, and successfully defeated, the Devil. His popularity soars and success is within reach. However, there are some small problems that develop which causes Johnston to question his faith. Problems like his increasing sexual attraction to his young female assistant; like his attraction to a local sex-club and a stripper named Denise; like picking up a famale hithchiker; and the incident with the janitor; and what at first seems to be cold-blooded murder; and his increasing inablility to function in the light and requiring darkness to pursue other urges such as attacking female victims and leaving puncture wounds in their neck. When his victims survive and seem to be immune to death Johnston becomes convinced that his vampire traits are not really a Satanic curse but, given his and his victims seemingly eternal life status, are really a gift from God. To be sure his methods are a little, shall we say, unorthodox, but God does sometimes work in mysterious ways. After all, who can argue with the gift of eternal life, no matter how acquired?
This is a religious horror story that is an absolute must-have for fans of this genre. It is well written and contains all of the elements of a best seller: Love, the supernatural, religion, sex, and a subtle, disquieting thought that keeps running through my mind, What if?
If you are looking for a ringside seat at the internal fight between light and dark and the possibility of another kind of eternal life, this is the book for you. Wooley just keeps getting better and better. Highly recommended.

Vampire, Meet Your Maker
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-22
In olden days, when the genre was young, a vampire could be repelled with the trappings of Christianity?a crucifix, a Bible, holy water?and this was taken as a given. In AWASH, Wooley expands the genre by following through on the implications of the Christian element. What if vampirism was truly a manifestation of the devil? What if it put him in opposition to God. And to give the tale a particularly sharp edge, Wooley makes his vampire a televangelist who gets in the neck while taking a little preaching junket through Transylvania. The resulting internal struggle between his longstanding faith and his new, savage appetite proves dangerous, and even deadly, to the innocents who orbit his ministry. How will the struggle resolve itself? How can it? How long can he continue the double-game, masquerading as the preacher he was when in fact he?s turned into a blood predator who lives by night? Will he be destroyed . . . or will the American lust for cult heroes propel him to new heights of success?

And make no mistake about it, this is horror, not theology. The suspense is palpable and the ?horror moments? are among the most effective in this polished novel. Wooley shows he can take a timeworn genre, re-imagine it, and concoct a story that?s fresh, entertaining, and all his own. Recommended!

Horror
B.P.R.D. Volume 6: The Universal Machine
Published in Paperback by Dark Horse (2007-01-24)
Authors: Mike Mignola, John Arcudi, and Guy Davis
List price: $17.95
New price: $11.00
Used price: $8.97

Average review score:

OUTSTANDING. Best chapter yet
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-30
This has been a good series up til now. Now it is a great one and the turning point is this book. Arcudi's contributions to the writing are special. The characters are now truly characters with concerns, lives, etc. The action is still top otch ad Guy Davis' art continues to be excellent. His work shuffles along just telling the story and then some creature or other appears across a two-page spread and the reaction is, "Wow!" When I get the newest book in this series, I find myself going back to book one and starting over each time enjoying the whole saga.

Excellence in Sequential Form
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-02
As a longtime Mike Mignola fan (I've been collecting the single issue Hellboy since the beginning, as well as Mignola's other works), I'm slowing coming to the belief that BPRD is currently the better than the current Hellboy title. I was very disappointed that Mignola wasn't illustrating BPRD when it first got going. But I've been seduced by Guy Davis' artwork. The more I look at Davis' compositions the more I like it. The stories here in BPRD seem to be consistently a bit stronger than the current Hellboy story lines. The collaborative effort in this title seems to be it's strength. This is a fine collection that recounts the teams effort to save a team mate from death. Excellent all around. Strongly recommended.

A 19th Century Spirit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-20
Mike Mignola writes very differently from the vast majority of comic artists today. His stuff reminds me a lot of H. P. Lovecraft and Edgar Alan Poe. Very rich, detailed stories - -plus the artwork is like looking at a woodcut print.

Very good, glad I got it
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-03
This continues the years-long story arc of the post-Hellboy BPRD.
If you haven't been reading the previous graphic novels, this
will be almost unintelligible to you. But if you have. . .

we learn more, much more, about Captain Daimio (puzzling, if
intriguing), get some distressing backstory of Dr. Kraus,
get a painfully small reminisce of Abe and HB on assignment
in the Canadian woods, and a touching vignette of Liz's
past.

The main story, so to speak, is Dr. Corrigan in the French Alps,
trying to obtain one of those impossibly rare and eldritch tomes
without which this genre of fiction would seem incomplete. I won't
get into spoilers here, but the moment at which she triumphs over
an adversary is easily the most satisfactory single panel I've
seen in a Hellboy story in quite some time.

And if you want to know what finally happens to Roger - this is
the one to read.

Horror
Back from the Dead
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2005-01-10)
Author: Stuart Land
List price: $21.95
New price: $25.16
Used price: $31.46

Average review score:

This novel will grab you and pull you in!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-15
This gripping novel transports a classic fictitious character into the modern world, culture and conscience. Within it's captivating pages, the author exposes the modern man for his monstrously hideous nature in contrast to his natural and timeless capacity for pure compassion. Our flaws, triumphs, aspirations, dignity and motivations are laid on the table before us and brilliantly dissected with a clear eye and a steady pen. It becomes easy to forget we are reading fiction as this tale comes to life in our hands.
Benjamin Underwood Halstead

Time well spent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-08
I must admit, it took a few weeks to get to it, but once I did, I was hooked. A continuation of Shelley's original, and yet considerably more. Fascinating for what does happen, what does not happen, and the play of good and evil in life. Well-drawn characters, great scenes, and mounting suspense ... what readers ought to be looking for.

Compelling novel of drama, horror, and Gothic storytelling.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-06

Stuart Land's book, Back from the Dead, is a book that I would recommend to other readers who are looking for a novel that is compelling, intriguing, and filled with adventure from the beginning to the end. The characters personalities unfold in a way that I felt as if I was in a relationship with them. When the book began they were like new neighbors, living next door. As I continued to get deeper into the story I got deeper into their hearts and souls. He brought the story together in a fashion that was unpredictable, keeping me awake at night.

Awake, thy book is near - grab this before taking off
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-04
Grab this book before taking off for your summer vacation, and take along the Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley's book, "Frankenstein", too.

I just finished the book so the ending is fresh in my mind, and I'll share it with you. No, I'll not ruin the ending, but will say that little has separated us from the time of Shelley's writing 200 hundred years ago and what we must conclude today. As a society, we are still not ready to be creators, parents, yes, but creators of life, no. And in the world of cloning (sheep, why sheep when you can have so many so easily....)

Now how the conclusion comes at you is why you should read this book. You will be hooked in the first chapter, which sets the stage of why you should beleive what comes in the following chapters, and beleive, you will. As chapters develop the plot, you will recognize the American society of today and why the conclusion is both surprising and not surprising. From the perspective of America today and the society we have built, this picture of life after resurrection is a tale to be understood.

OK, there were two typos, one on page 207, and another page, too, which you will have to find. I mention this because I'm sure that this book will go into a second printing, so here is a change to catch it.

Enjoy

Horror
The Bailey Game
Published in Paperback by Macmillan Children's Books (2005-03-04)
Author: Celia Rees
List price: $9.91
New price: $4.60
Used price: $2.72

Average review score:

The Bailey Game - Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-07
Plot: It is about a boy named Michael Bailey who has a lot of trouble at school and then he is never seen again. But then a new girl arrives and the bullying starts again. Does it get out of hand like it did the last time or will it stop before it gets really serious? Somebody really needs to do something about it, but can they?
Highlights: My favourite character is Alex becuase she is kind to the new girl and really sticks up for her.
Jasmine, Year 7, Wallingford

The Bailey Game - Review
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-06
Plot: It's about a boy who gets bullied terribly by the Bridge Boys. That was a long time ago though. A new girl comes from Australia. She finds it hard to settle in. Will Alex help her?
Highlights: Alex is my favourite character because she is kind and friendly. My favourite part of the book is when we find out what happens to Bailey.
Weaknesses: I think the ending could be stronger.
This book is aimed at about 10-13 year olds and I think the book is fantastic!
Amber, Year 7, Wallingford

The Bailey Game - Review
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-06
Plot: Michael Bailey suffered harsh bullying but that was one year ago and someone new is in town!
Setting: This is set in a primary school.
Hightlight: This book is brilliant how the author sets the mysterious feeling of what happened to Michael Bailey and how she puts you right in the middle of the situation.
Weaknesses: This book is great! But it takes a long time until you can find out the mystery.
It is fantastic when you find out the end, so I recommend this book to someone who likes Scooby Doo or Inspector Morse.
Kit, Year 7, Wallingford

The boy who nobody knew
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-22
A game. it started as a game. When a boy with the surname 'Bailey' arrived, he was different. A class of children picked up on this, and so was born, the Bailey game. A game of predudice. This game almost meant the end to the boys life. When he moved on, all settled.
Until...

...a new girl starts. Now, History is repeating itself, and it is up to one girl to save her new friend from the terrible fate of Robert Bailey, as a whole class of children, powered by predudice start the game again...

Horror
Bare Bones: Conversations on Terror With Stephen King
Published in Paperback by Warner Books (1989-07)
Authors: Tim Underwood and Stephen King
List price: $8.95
New price: $7.84
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

I dont now
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 38 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-14
I havent red this book but it souns cool

Insights from the King
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-21
this was a wonderful collection of interviews of Stephen King. It would be interesting to see another collection done, with some of the more recent interviews and thoughts from him.

So Good I Bought The TP, TC, & Limited Numbered Copies
Helpful Votes: 38 out of 40 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-11
In this collection of essays, both new Stephen King fans, and SK'ers alike can enjoy a unique, indepth and personal view into the mind of the world's greatest horror writer. In Bare Bones King does just that -- he Bares his Bones, showing us the reader what really goes on inside his head. You are taken down into a dark cavern that few men have traveled into and survived. (Well, at least literarily -- not literally). As stated above, I was so impressed and intrigued by these works that I bought all three copies available: the 1st edition paperback, the first edition hardcover, and number 588 of 1152 limited handnumbered copies. Truly a "missing link" in any King collection. If nothing else, Bare Bones is a "must-read".

For King-Fans a must
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-28
This is maybe the most interesting book about Stephen King available. If you want to know something about him, you have to read it, because you won't learn more anywhere else. Not even in his own 'On Writing' by the way.

Maybe it would be interesting too to read more actual interviews, but these one help a lot. Okay, it's not always that interesting, like in the conversation about his radio station and sometimes weird, like in the one about 'Maximum Overdrive' if you have seen it. And of course a lot of things are repeated.

But it's really a must for King-fans.

Horror
Behind the Throne
Published in Paperback by Highbridge Press (2000-06)
Author: Martin J. Dougherty
List price: $19.95
New price: $19.95
Used price: $4.44

Average review score:

A fantasy with real swords
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-22
Behind the Throne is classified fantasy-adventure because it takes place in a medieval world that never was. This lets an author have person-to-person battle instead of the faceless conflicts of modern war, arrange events at will without having to align with history, imagine new cultures and nations.

This is not the usual fantasy-adventure romp with lots of naked sweaty muscles, comic-book violence, and a celebratory clench-a-wench ale-swigging at the end. There is no magic, no mysticism, and less philosophizing than you find in an exchange between two hard-boiled detectives. It is battle and war and pain and death from beginning to end, with small bits of personal peace and reward. Good people die, and bad people live too long. Moral questions do not have easy solutions, and even the hard solutions aren't perfect. I liked it very much.

Dougherty has a clear, transparent writing style that focuses attention on the story rather than the author. His characters are described by their actions, so they develop a little more slowly than "The noble Pancha Dru with his eagle's countenance and heroic heart" but feel more like people than like dreams. I don't feel like chucking Alvin Riall under the chin and feeding him cookies, which is the impulse most of the modern ilk of fantasy heroes and heroines arouse in me. Dougherty even has female characters with independence and fingthing ability -- which is not an anachronism. Medieval chatelaines held their husband's castles in their absence, under war and siege, in all reality.

Martin Dougherty is a science teacher and a fencing coach. He has written popular fantasy-adventure gaming materials for several years. The gamers I have known demand logic and realism in their fantasy wars. Dougherty has successfully transferred those elements to novel-length fiction. I hope he writes more.

Carpe Hunc Librum
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-10
Martin J. Dougherty has created a very clearly-drawn world for this superb piece of heroic fantasy. This allows the plot to move smoothly from place to place at a cracking pace, while still allowing ample character development. The plot concerns Duke Alvin Riall, who is victim to the machinations of the treasonous baron Terrik. The former is banished from Valdir, making it easier for Terrik to make an attempt for the throne. the story mixes political intrigue with epic battles and duels. It never drags because the action is is so well described, and the characterisation is so good. There are some really sympathetic characters in Riall and King Yantr, both are struggling to do what is necessary as well as what is honourable and right. There are also really cool characters in Terrik, and the double-hard Sir Evrik, my personal favourite. i wholeheartedly recommend this book, even to those who would not normally read heroic fantasy, there are no dragons or wizards here, only the location is mythical. Dougherty is better than Gemmell, and I look forward to his next book.

Even 'we' like adventure!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-05
Right, I'm one of those very strange people who doesn't 'get on' with Pratchett and I don't care for Sharpe books much either. You've guessed it - I'm a girl. So, why did I like 'Behind the Throne' by MJ Dougherty so much? This book is all fighting - from duels to skirmishes, from sieges to pitch battles and on to all out war. And, it seems to happen every three pages or so. Yet, I loved it.

The characterisation is such that, even without any kissing and not a description of a dress in sight, 'us girls' can still appreciate a rollicking good read full of cunning, intrique , adventure and daring. So, if you like books where your villians are villianous, your heroes are everthing they should be, chivalry and honour are alive and well and they all have very, very, big swords then give this book a go. It's the one for you. Will someone hurry up and make a film of this so Sean Connery can play Evrik before it's too late. Watch me be first in the queue come opening night!

even girls like it
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-02
Right, I'm one of those very strange people who doesn't 'get on' with Pratchett and I don't care for the Sharpe books much either - you've guessed it, I'm a girl. So why did I like 'Behind the Throne' by M.J. Dougherty so much? This book is all fighting - from duels to skirmishes, pitch battles to sieges and occasionally, all out war and it seems to happen every three pages or so. Yet, I loved it. The characterisation is such that, even without any kissing an not a description of a dress in sight, us girls can still appreciate a rollicking good read full of intrique, adventure and daring. So, if you like books where the villians are villanous, the heroes are everything they should be and they all have very very big swords, you'll like this one. Will someone hurry up and make a film of this so Sean Connery can play Evrik before it's too late?. Watch me be first in the queue come opening night. S. L. Biggin

PS I'm older than thirteen so don't enter me for the competition but I can't find anywhere else to write a few comments. Sorry - amazon I dont want to infringe your rules so ignore the age box for me cos it's a lie.

Horror
The believers
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (1989)
Author: Janice Holt Giles
List price: $20.00
Used price: $20.73

Average review score:

Captures your imagination, explores another time and culture
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-30
From beginning to end I was drawn into the lives of all the caratures. Being from Kentucky and visiting Shakertown, I was able to use my imagination and see different sides of how they lived. It brought out both the pros and cons to their living. I also liked how a woman in that time was able to be strong and go with her "beliefs".

The book is great. Janice really reaches out to the reader!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-20
I have read many of Ms. Giles books and this one is by far my favorite! She truly reached out to me and because of her book I am contemplating converting to Shakerism! She makes the characters come alive, feel their feelings, and even though she shares it from a point of view against Shakers, she lets you form your own opinion. I worked at a Shakertown but nothing was as moving to me as this book!

Great Page Turner
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-28
I found this book in the attic covered under piles of dust. I did not know what it was about as it did not have a cover or anything telling what the book was about. I decided to give it a try and was immediatly submersed in the world of the 1800's. I could not put the book down after the first page. it took me about 2 days to complete the whole book. The author, Giles, is very descriptive and exciting writer. Usually i do not like to read books set in the 1800's, but this book is excellent. It is about the life of Rebecca Fowler. It starts with her early life chasing the man she loves and evovles as Rebecca does into her life story. It talks of life in the wilderness and then life while she is involved in a Shaker community and life thereafter. This is an excellent book and i cannot wait to read more book written by Giles.

Not her best
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-05-19
I read this as a child, and again as an adult. I re-read it after I went to the Shaker community in Northern Kentucky and enjoyed it much more, but give me "Hannah Fowler," "Six Horse Hitch" or "Johnny Osage" (all by Janice Holt Giles) anytime! She is a terrific author who has done better than this effort. But, it is still a good story...worth the read.

Horror
Beneath the Surface: 13+ Shocking Tales of Terror
Published in Paperback by Shroud Publishing LLC (2008-02-05)
Author:
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.71
Used price: $10.17

Average review score:

Startling Glimpses into the Netherworld
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
I was traveling across the country on the Sunset Limited, and this book kept my imagination going through every town we passed on our journey. While my body was riding the rails, my mind was entering a new dimension of horror. Shroud has published a gripping assortment of extremely intelligent and frightening yarns. It's well worth the money. Take it on a trip, and you won't be bored! You will, however, get your mind blown away.

Horrifically entertaining and loved every page!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-25
I thoroughly enjoyed this book from cover to cover. The intensity and scary nature of these short stories was as much entertaining as it was thrilling. I would highly recommend this anthology to everyone who enjoys a book filled with fantasy and intrigue.

Judging a book by its cover....
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
...never, but as a fan of Lovecraft I admit I was initially drawn to the book by the fantastic cover art.

Thankfully this book is more than just a pretty face. Like Frankenstein's monster this little grimoire was cobbled together from different pieces and assembled nicely for your reading pleasure (13 different short stories, various authors).

I won't post any spoilers but if your tastes occasionally tilt towards the dark, the macabre, the spooky or the unknown then you will find some reading pleasure lurking in this book.

Upon finishing the book my interest was piqued, I checked the site listed on the back. (Shroud publishing)This was their first publication, quite impressive for first timers.

The site indicates that they do publish a magazine (I will be checking that out) and that there are plans for a second book to be published, with 13 more stories. No date listed for the next release but the cover looks great.

Downright entertaining, and frightening too!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-02
I have had the pleasure of reading this anthology cover-to-cover and I would have to say that it includes some of the most entertaining (and chilling) horror stories I have ever read. The book begins with a tale by Scott Christian Carr called "Thorguson" about a sunken submarine with its dying captain slowly losing his grip on sanity. The tale had a discernible Lovecraftian feel about it that I enjoyed immensely. Some of my favorites include the bizarre Japanese-themed story "The Drawer" and Burrow's "The Deep End" about an eery deep south trailer park given to ancient rites and rituals. I would highly recommend this book to those that enjoy Stephen King stories or other modern horror masters such as McCammon, Keene, or Ketchum.

Horror
The Bermuda Triangle (Call of Cthulhu Horror Roleplaying, 1990s Era)
Published in Paperback by Chaosium Inc. (1998-02-01)
Author: Justin Schmid
List price: $16.95
New price: $9.04
Used price: $8.21

Average review score:

Great book for Mythos adventuring!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-26
I have long been a fan of the works of the late Howard P. Lovecraft, and when I discovered a roleplaying game set in his horror universe existed, I knew I had to get it. From the modules to the setting books and creature compendiums, CoC has been a never-ending delight for my inner horror gamer. I highly recommend this sourcebook, along with every single other CoC sourcebook, module, and rulebook. Call of Cthulhu is definitely worth it!

A Great Modern-era Sourcebook for "Call of Cthulhu!"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-31
I found this to be an excellent "modern-day" resource for the "Call of Cthulhu" role playing game. Fans of other settings for the game probably won't find it as interesting, or as useful, but if you like to play your "CoC" in the "here and now," this is definitely a must-have resource.

Chaosium's summary text for this product reads: "What secrets lie within the Devil's Triangle? Why was the Mary Celeste abandoned after it passed through the triangle's waters? What caused the disappearance of an entire flight of Avengers in 1945? Why do electronics fail in the triangle for no apparent reason? Now, the answers can at last be revealed.

"'The Bermuda Triangle' is a 1990s sourcebook centered around the famous mystery of the Devil's Triangle. It acts as a guidebook to the entire Caribbean region, detailing not only Bermuda, Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti, and other nearby islands, but also exposing the mysteries of Rha'thylla, the Sargasso Sea, and more. Guidelines are included for running entire Caribbean campaigns. The book concludes with 'The Privateer's Diary,' a scenario."

Great Supplement!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-06
This book is a great addition to any CoC collection. Not only does it provide tons of information on the people, politics, and customs of the Bermuda triangle and surrounding areas, but it is loaded with useful creatures, ideas, theories, etc. It has many charts that all keepers should find useful, such as one that randomnly chooses a sea animal. And, to top it all off, it comes with a scenario that I cant wait to throw on my investigators. It is well worth the cost, and then some!

Devil's Land
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-26
This book is very good if you enjoy the modern adventures for this game. I really liked it because i am very interested in the Bermuda Triangle. I won't tell you any of the story because it would ruin the fun of the game. I wouldn't reccomend this book if you enjoy long campaigns like Beyond th Mountains of Madness (which took me a couple of months to complete with my friends). I would highly recommend this book to anyone except people who like the 20's or 30's adventures.


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