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text 2019-08-10 20:49
Halloween Bingo - Preparty - Day # 10 - Most Anticipated Reads
The Fisherman - John Langan
The Monk - Christopher MacLachlan,Matthew Gregory Lewis
Dracul (Stoker's Dracula #1) - J.D. Barker,Dacre Stoker

Halloween Bingo has become a Booklikes tradition. Along with the game itself, there are also some other traditions that have emerged: the celebration of markers and pre-game planning, the forming of group reads, the adornment of blogs with all things seasonal. 

 

For my own taking part in Halloween Bingo, there are three small reading-related traditions that have evolved over the past four years and that, even tho I don't do tradition much elsewhere, I wouldn't want to miss:

 

1. Reading something totally out of my comfort zone. 

2. Reading a Gothic classic.

3. Reading something recommended by Char. 

 

The Fisherman was a book that Char recommended, and that is the only thing I really remember about the book. But anyway, look at that cover...isn't it gorgeous?

 

The Monk is a Gothic Classic that has been on my list for ages. I nearly picked it last year for the Gothic square but then ended up with Mary Shelley's The Last Man, which I have no regrets about at all. However, when Darth Pedant mentioned The Monk the other day, I had to make sure the book would end up on this year's Halloween Bingo TBR. 

 

Dracul by Barker and Stoker is a book I would not have picked up other than for the game's purpose. I got a copy in May at my local bookstore - mostly because the cover is fabulous...and Char liked it - but much of the proposed story is outside my usual reading. The story is based on a real person (Bram Stoker) but plays fast and loose with the biographical facts...I guess...or hope...from what I read in the description. 

 

So, three books I am very much looking forward to that fit my three Halloween Bingo  reading traditions. 

 

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text 2019-03-04 19:16
Reading progress update: I've read 129 out of 260 pages.
The Fisherman - John Langan

I used to think tadpoles were cute 

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text 2019-02-24 00:45
The Fisherman - John Langan

Ok Char here I go

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review 2018-02-24 01:53
The Fisherman by John Langan
The Fisherman - John Langan

Abe and Dan, coworkers, with nothing in common but their grief, find the bond of friendship and solace in the peaceful hobby of fishing the streams in upstate New York. Then Dan suggests Dutchman's Creek. Although Abe is unfamiliar with this waterway, he is more than willing to give it a go.
When one of the locals hears of their interest, he feels the need to tell them the legend of Dutchman's Creek, and why it is avoided.
Assuming it's no more than a colorful piece of folklore, a fish story as it were, they head for Dutchman's Creek......where they find a darkness deeper than any body of water, one that promises for a price.

Langan has written a fantastic novel, at turns achingly human, and gutwrenchingly horrifying. A grand tale of cosmic folklore that would have done Algernon Blackwood or Arthur Machen proud.

Highest possible recommendation.

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text 2017-01-12 20:44
7 Favorites of 2016
Bone - Jeff Smith
The Ballad of Black Tom - Victor LaValle
The Lies of Locke Lamora - Scott Lynch
The Lions of al-Rassan - Guy Gavriel Kay
The Iron Jackal (Tales of the Ketty Jay Book 3) - Chris Wooding
The Fear Institute - Jonathan L. Howard
The Fisherman - John Langan

Yeah, it's a little late, but these are my favorites of the books I  read last year. I'm only listing one per author/series, and I am not including short stories, but one novella did make the list, as did one graphic novel. So, in no particular order, my favorite books read in 2016

 

1. Bone - Jeff Smith  Bone - Jeff Smith  

 

    Easily the longest book I read  last year, and the one I'd been wanting to read the longest. I remember reading an interview with Smith when this was first being serialized about twenty years ago. Basically, if Carl Barks (of the old Donald Duck/Uncle Scrooge comics) had written LOTR... It's gorgeously drawn, and surprisingly deep, epic and hilarious in equal measure. Despite being over 1300 pages long, I read it in a day. It is truly that compelling.

 

2. The Ballad of Black Tom - Victor LaValle  The Ballad of Black Tom - Victor LaValle 

 

    I read a lot of Lovecraftiana in 2016, but this was easily the best example. This novella is an inspired retelling of "The Horror at Red Hook," easily one of Lovecrafts most racist stories, that flips the whole thing on it's head. The main character goes down some dark paths, but you always understand why. This tale both celebrates and excoriates HPL while telling a great story in it's own right.

 

3. The Lies of Locke Lamora - Scott Lynch  The Lies of Locke Lamora - Scott Lynch  

 

    The first, and easily best, of the Gentleman Bastards series, this introduces us to a spectacular crew of conn artists as they take on a huge job in a fantastic city reminiscent of Renaissance Venice. Told in both flashback and present day, with truly remarkable characters, this book should be read by any fantasy fan. The rest of the series thus far has been a case of diminishing returns, but still fun. Either way, I'm in it for the long haul.

 

4. The Lions of al-Rassan - Guy Gavriel Kay  The Lions of al-Rassan - Guy Gavriel Kay  

 

    Loosely based on Song of the Cid, this is a flat-out gorgeous novel that deals with heavy themes while still being very funny and entertaining. Thhis also may have been the best-written book I read last year.

 

5. The Iron Jackal (Tales of the Ketty Jay Book 3) - Chris Wooding  The Iron Jackal (Tales of the Ketty Jay Book 3) - Chris Wooding  

 

    I read and loved the entire Ketty Jay series in '16. Still, this penultimate volume was the most epic and exciting, while also having several of the best character moments. It is almost too easy to describe this series as a steampunk-fantasy Firefly... So that is exactly what I'll do.

 

6. The Fear Institute - Jonathan L. Howard  The Fear Institute - Jonathan L. Howard  

 

   Another great Lovecraftian piece, albeit one deeply involved with old HP's Dreamlands, an aspect of his work too often ignored in favor of his Mythos. This is the third in Howard's Johannes Cabal series, and the first to feel like a genuine horror novel. This is my favorite of the five books in the series thus far.

 

7. The Fisherman - John Langan  The Fisherman - John Langan  

 

    True, there are other books I rated higher, but this one makes the list, if only for the novella that serves as the novel's centerpiece. The rest of the book is quite good, but Der Fischer is possibly the single greatest piece of cosmic horror I have yet to read. It is indebted to Lovecraft without using any of his actual narrative inventions, instead using Talmudic, Cabbalistic and Biblical sources for it's horrors. Truly amazing.

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