250 ~ Other Event
Dewey’s 24-Hour Readathon
Twice a year, readers around the world take part in Dewey’s 24-Hour Readathon. I’ve participated on and off for a number of years. A complicating factor for the April readathon is that it is often on the same weekend as spring frisbee league finals. Not so this year!
I didn’t post about it in advance and I was pretty quiet on social media, but I did read a bunch and had a good Saturday readathon. I read 337 pages, mostly short stories from The Women of Weird Tales. My day was a bit curtailed by my allergies. It’s hard to read when your eyes are itching. Audio books don’t work out for me and I wasn’t in the mood to deviate from my initial reading list.
251 ~ Short Story
Deal Me In, wk 15: 6♠️
“Mission to Margal” by Hugh B. Cave
Finally, a proper Haitian zombie from this zombie anthology. I read this as part of the readathon and was surprised that it was more of a novella than a short story; a distinct disadvantage when reading ebooks is that it’s hard to flip forward to see where a story might end. While Cave is leisurely in his telling, the story doesn’t lag. I was expecting a more mystical ending, but I suppose his resolution gets the job done.
252 ~ Movie
Lurking Fear (1994)
Directed & Written by C. Courtney Joyner
Starring: Blake Bailey, Ashley Laurence, Jon Finch, Jeffrey Combs, Vincent Schiavelli
Watched for HorrorX524 challenge, prompt “Happy Anniversary! Watch a Horror released in 1994.”
Oh, early 90s. Oh, Full Moon Entertainment. Lurking Fear is one of those films that just feels shoddy. The bones of the story aren’t bad: an ex-con, just out of prison, goes to retrieve money buried in a family plot which happens to be the battleground between the townsfolk and subterranean creatures. Maybe not the most original plot, but one you could have a good time with. It bears little resemblance to the Lovecraft story, which is fine. I don’t hold Lovecraft in high regard for his story-telling. But the choices here are to tell the story in the most boring way possible. Plus, there are little things that could have been cleaned up. The movie is set at Christmas (for no discernible reason) in Massachusetts, but there are bright green fields of corn and I doubt the weather in the northeast in December is conducive to tank tops. Most of the acting is . . . not great. Jeffrey Combs is doing his best, but feels like he’s in a different movie. The creature concept is nice and creepy, but it’s not used very well. It’s just not fun enough to be “so bad it’s good.”
🗓️ The 500 – What’s this all about?
Initial Post
500 Before 50 tag
500 Before 50 spreadsheet














