Posted in Movie, Readathons-Challenges-Memes, Short Story

The 500: 250–252

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.

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.

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

Posted in Readathons-Challenges-Memes, Short Story

The 500: 235–236

“Little Fathers of Darkness” by Jason Sanford
Deal Me In, wk 13: 5♦️

“Little Fathers of Darkness” is connected to Sanford’s novel, Plague Birds, which I have not read. There is a lot going on in the world of Plague Birds. The story does a fair job of bringing a new reader up-to-speed, though I often said, “Yeah, okay. I’ll just go with it.” Unfortunately, that doesn’t work as well with the character’s inter-personal relationships. I’m sure I would have cared more about the characters if I’d read the novel.

Seasons of Reading

Spring Into Horror Readathon

April is halfway to Halloween! I decided against daily horror movies to celebrate, and am instead going to do some extra horror reading. All the details are at Seasons of Reading.

Tentative TBR:

  • Island by Richard Laymon (from my own shelves)
  • The Women of Weird Tales, ed by Melanie Anderson (for balance)
  • Whatever I end up checking out from the library!

🗓️ The 500 – What’s this all about?
Initial Post
500 Before 50 tag
500 Before 50 spreadsheet

Posted in History

Sunday Miscellanea, 4/17

Monday Miscellanea, but on Sunday . . .

Reading

cover: Those Who Walk Away by Patricia Highsmith
cover: The Forest for the Trees by Betsy Lerner

For Spring into Horror and Classics Club Spin, I was reading Curious, if True by Elizabeth Gaskell, published in 1860. The opening novella “The Old Nurse’s Tale” was a reread for me. I also read the second novella in the collection “The Poor Clare,” but then I put the collection aside. It’s not *bad*, but it is very slow and dependent on relationships between a lot of characters past and present. I’m just not in the mood for that. Moved on to Those Who Walk Away by Patricia Highsmith.

Finished reading The Forest for the Trees: An Editor’s Advice to Writers by Betsy Lerner. Not much to this book that I haven’t heard before. Very much geared toward literary writers instead of genre writers, who have a slightly different environment. Also, this edition was published in 2000. It has only cynicism for the coming ebook era and no inkling about how authors will have to deal with social media.

Playing

Screenshot from Stardew Valley video game. The interior of a house with a big double bed, a dog asleep on the rug, fireplace, and some decorations.

Too much Stardew Valley.

Also, quite a bit of ultimate frisbee. Flyin’ Hawaiian, my spring league team, is currently undefeated. We had two regular season games left, but we’ve secured a first round bye at finals. Finals are the 30th. (Yes, the same day as Readathon once again.) The Friday pickup game has been pretty good the last couple weeks too. I seem to enjoy playing against a girl half my age.

Goal Check-In

Writing & Entangled Tomes

  • “Colors of the Sea” is still out in the world.
  • I’ve lost momentum with “Untitled California Gothic.” I’m going to try rewriting what I have.
  • Going to start reading stories for the next Entangled Tome.

Shelf Maintenance

  • After a finish and a DNF, I’m 10/25 on my Beat the Backlog goal.
  • It’s been 68 days since I last acquired a book.
Posted in Readathons-Challenges-Memes

Halfway to Halloween 2022

You know what April is? It’s halfway to Halloween!

Last year, I celebrated with a horror movie A to Z. I’m not quite that ambitious this year, though I do intend to also keep up a series of horror-aspected Cinema Saturdays. In the works are trio of Texas Chainsaw movies and an Evil Dead/Army of Darkness post.

As I’ve said, my reading has been pretty free-range this year, but I think I can definitely get “seasonal” for Seasons of Reading’s Spring into Horror Readathon. My Classics Club Spin book turned out to be Curious, if True: Strange Tales by Elizabeth Gaskell, which is perfect for Spring into Horror. I’m also thinking about rereading House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski and probably some other horror, mystery, thriller or gothic from off my shelves.

The next Dewey’s 24-Hour Readathon is April 30th, which might be a perfect way to end the month.

Posted in History

Reading Notes, 5/17/21

Bout of Books 31 Wrap-up

Last week was actually kind of stressful, despite my optimistic Monday attitude. I had a goal of reading 700 pages for BoB and ended up reading 648 pgs. Considering I got into a big don’t-feel-like-reading mood around Thursday, that’s pretty good.

  • I finished reading A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark (and reviewed it!). I’ll say it again, I definitely recommend it.
  • I also finished Wild Mind by Natalie Goldberg. It’s her follow-up to Writing Down the Bones. I’ve been reading a chapter or so of a writing-related book every morning for a while now.
  • I made a good start on Mosses from an Old Manse by Nathaniel Hawthorne and read a couple other short stories as well.

Currently Reading


Posted in History

Reading Notes, 5/3/21

Spring Into Horror Wrap-Up

Spring into Horror Readathon banner

I didn’t finish many books in April, but I did keep (happily) focused on horror. I read to completion The Phantom of the Opera (which was my Classic’s Club pick) and Into Bones like Oil by Kaaron Warren. I also read volume one of Clive Barker’s Books of Blood. I’m not counting that as finished because it’s a three volume collection and I do intend to read the rest. I started The Ceremonies by T. E. D. Klein and I’m in the middle of Nightmare Movies by Kim Newman.

Deal Me In

8♣️: “Let Shadows Slip Through” by Kali Napier
Our narrator is a nervous mother, traveling with her young son in Australia. When they stop at the Hampton Arms tea room, her past catches up to her. A short, atmospheric piece with a haunting sense of place.

Reading Challenge Check-In

Didn’t I just do this? I guess April went by fast-ish, which is a change from any month since February 2020.

Classics Club Icon

The Classics Club

Goal: 10 Books by 12/14/21
Progress: 4/10

✅ Read The Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux. I’m on track!


A pic of a bookshelf
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

#ShelfLove

Goal: Abstain from acquiring books; read at least 21 books from my shelves.
Progress: 1 pre-order, 3 free books, 1 very cheap book by an author I love, 1 ARC; 3/21+

❌ Yes, somehow I managed to not finish reading any of my own books…


I Read Horror Year-Round banner

I Read Horror Year-Round

Goal: Read 6 books from 6 categories.
Progress: 2/6

Into Bones like Oil by Kaaron Warren counts for the prompt: Written by a woman! I decided not to count The Phantom of the Opera for “Monster or monsters” despite the OG being one of Universal’s classic movie monsters. The OG (Opera Ghost) is a guy with some issues.


Dune Read-through

Goal: Read Herbert’s 6 Dune books by October.
Progress: Finished Children of Dune and started God Emperor of Dune. The chapter-a-day method is working well. ✅

Nonfiction

Goal: Read at least 30% nonfiction.
Progress: I slipped down to 27%. And then decided to right the situation by starting a 640 page book. I’m pretty sure I’m totally doing this correctly. 👍‍‍

Short Stories

Goal: Deal Me In each week and Cather Reading Project each month.
Progress: Doing fine here. ✅

Posted in History

Reading Notes, 4/27/21

Finished Reading

I participated in Dewey’s 24-Hour Readathon on this past Saturday. I started more books than I finished, but that’s the way it goes sometimes. I did read, cover-to-cover, Into Bones like Oil by Kaaron Warren. It’s a horror novella that has been getting quite a bit of award nomination notice. Dora, who has recently lost her two children to a tragedy, becomes a resident at The Angelsea, a boarding house for people who have a hard time sleeping. It’s a grimy, skeevy place full of ghosts and opportunists.

I also read/listened to a few short stories, including Lovecraft’s “Colour Out of Space” and the delightful “The Tree’s Wife” by Mary Elizabeth Counselman. I’m not familiar with Counselman, but I find it delightful that she wrote for both Weird Tales and Good Housekeeping.

Deal Me In

J♦️ – “Dotty” by Horacio Quiroga
This story by Uruguayan writer Quiroga was translated by Nina Zumel. Zumel includes a link discussing the translation and adaptation: how to include the word-play of the original story when a fairly straight English translation doesn’t allow for that. I think she does a darn good job. This story is a little weird and a little unsettling as we contemplate the many meanings of “dotty.”

Willa Cather Short Story Project

This month’s story is “The Son of the Celestial,” in which Cather indulges in Oriental exoticism. On one hand, it’s Cather stretching her writing muscles. It’s imaginative and has some fine imagery. On the other hand, the depiction of Yung Le Ho is very stereotypical for the time (and for a long time to come). Ponter is his good friend, a white man who is on the outs with academia due to his propensity for drinking and pool playing. It should be noted though that Yung is still a member of his community while Ponter is not really a member of white society.

Currently Reading


One of the books I started on Saturday was Nightmare Movies: Horror on the Screen since the 1960s by Kim Newman. It’s big. I’ll try to finish it by the time my loan ends. Still doing a chapter-a-day of God Emperor of Dune (which reminds me, I haven’t read today!). And I’ve jumped back into the world of ARCs with P. Djèlí Clark’s A Master of Djinn.