Postby JasonPratt » Wed Oct 11, 2006 6:38 am
I used to read King for the fantasy--if I want to be scared I'll watch a movie, though for the most part I think in terms of the _fantasy_ there, too. Several of his books are tense, but it's hard to write 'scary' because timing is so critical. (In a book you have to go with concept, which is why horror and even terror is easier than fright.)
I guess the book that scared me worst, was a book on Bigfoot I read as a child. All the books I read on such things were serious books by anthropologists, or at least were on topics that serious anthropologists were looking into, and that made it a lot more unnerving to me. I was in the middle of reading perhaps the largest such book I ever found at the library, when this hideous inhuman _SCREEECH_ erupted behind me. I just about died right then and there before it got me.
It was Dad, cleaning the window outside with a squeegee.
(Still, the effect has lingered!)
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"For all shall be salted with fire. Salt is good, but if the salt becomes unsalty, with what will you season it? Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with one another." -- Mark 9:49-50 (my candidate for most important overlooked verse in Scripture. {g})
"We must
be strong and brave--
our home
we've got to save!
We must make
the fighting cease,
so Mother Earth
will be at peace!
Through all the fire and the smoke,
we will never give up hope:
if we can win,
the Earth will survive--
we'll keep peace alive!" -- from the English lyrics to the closing theme of _Space Battleship Yamato_
"It _was_ harsh. Mirei didn't have anything that would soften it either." -- the surprisingly astute (I might even call it inspired {s!}) theological conclusion to Marie Brennan's _Doppleganger_ (Warner-Aspect, April 2006)