Halloween is coming in just a few hours. Do you have something spooky to read?
I've enjoyed suspense and horror for as long as I've been reading, though it's always hard to find appealing books in either genre. I have weird tastes and requirements for what I read. Most books just don't grab me, or some particular aspect keeps me from reading. Here's my list of some favorite creepy short stories and novels, in no particular order:
30 October 2010
Montana Royalty by B.J. Daniels

Montana Royalty by B.J. Daniels is being offered for free, at least at my local Borders. There's a big ol' FREE GIFT emblem on the front cover. I guess it's meant to get people into reading Harlequin Intrigue books, though I'd have thought they would want to pick a more typical example than this one.
Originally published in 2008, Montana Royalty is a sort of twisted Cinderella story crossed with the best kind of soap-opera shenanigans--think Dynasty times Dallas divided by One Life to Live. I'd first read B.J. Daniels with this month's Boots and Bullets, so I sort of knew what I was getting into: both are an insane combination of mistaken identity, baby-switching, and murder that stands out from the typical Intrigue book.
29 October 2010
The Exile by Diana Gabaldon

The Exile is a graphic novel retelling the plot of Outlander from a modified point of view. The main effect of this seems to be that the action is always going on somewhere else. Scenes seem barely connected to one another, and the motivations of characters are not adequately explained.
As with many graphic novels based on other media, and many graphic novels by authors new to the format, the reading experience feels rushed and slight. I read The Exile in one sitting, and when I finished felt like I had barely read at all. I'm not sure if it covers the whole of the first novel, but the disjointed sce
nes and incomplete characterization gave more than a little of the impression that this was more of a cash-in than anything else. Though I can't vouch for how well it accompanies the original novel, as a standalone I can't recommend it.
28 October 2010
The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

It's the long-favorite novel of developmentally arrested young people, the story of a pilot who crashes in the desert and meets a young boy. The boy tells him stories about his home planet, Asteroid B-612, and the other planets he has visited. He complains about grown-ups and their lack of imagination, worries about his planet's sole rose, and asks for a picture of a sheep. The pilot, after a few frustrated attempts at such, draws a box. The sheep is inside, he says. The little prince thinks it is perfect.
Warrior by Zoë Archer

Serviceable yet lacking character? Sounds like a romance novel.
Not this one, though. Warrior by Zoë Archer, first in the Blades of the Rose series, has enough character--and characters--for a whole month's worth of Harlequin Presents. I picked this one up after reading a favorable description of its first sequel, Scoundrel, and bought both at once because there was a free B. J. Daniels book for anyone who bought two romance novels at once. I'll get to both of those a little later.
Emily Reads!
Here's the deal. Every time I buy a book or borrow one or check one out from the library, I'll scan the cover and talk about it here. When I read said books, I'll write about them. Okay? Go!
So what does Emily read? Emily reads fantasy novels. Emily reads classic Westerns. Emily reads romance novels of all stripes, mysteries, YA novels, serious literature, science fiction, comic books, graphic novels, how-to books, and a helluva lot of other stuff.
Read and find out, bucko.
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