![This is a question](/images/board_posticon.gif)
Smash Monkey asks: "what's the creepiest thing you've seen, heard or felt? What has sent shivers running up your spine and skidmarks running up your undercrackers? Tell us, we'll make it all better"
( , Thu 7 Apr 2011, 13:57)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
I think in many cases King writes the "long and dull" bits better than he writes the horror. It would be a pretty good book about growing up even if you took out all of the scary icky parts.
That said ... the bit with the snow tunnel and the shuffly anorak-clad ghostchild thing in The Shining gave me the terrible heebie jeebies and no mistake.
( , Thu 14 Apr 2011, 12:31, 3 replies)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
The Shining
Shawshank redemption
There are others but these stand out.
Always thought that the 'IT' withouth the icky bits would be stand by me, another King book.
( , Thu 14 Apr 2011, 13:48, closed)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
Most of the Tommyknockers is just describing the ordinary day-to-day lives of the residents of Haven: card games, drinking, each of them has a terrible secret that they won't reveal to anyone else (usually to do with masturbating)...at one point he even breaks off from the narrative completely and starts writing a potted history of the town. Everything of import happens in the first few chapters and the last few chapters, the rest is mindless filler.
( , Thu 14 Apr 2011, 14:28, closed)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
I have't read Tommyknockers and it's at least twenty years since I read It. But by your apparent criteria, a good 80 or 90% of War and Peace would be mindless filler. Nothing particularly momentous happens until Napoleon rolls up.
Not that I'm comparing King to Tolstoy or owt. But there's more to literature than just bang whallop action event action fright bang action!
( , Thu 14 Apr 2011, 15:18, closed)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
those are the bits I like
if I wanted to read about ordinary people and their lives, I'd read Woman's Own
( , Thu 14 Apr 2011, 15:41, closed)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
Loved the bits in It that were about small town childhood, and even the scary parts with Pennywise the Clown were pretty scary and still atmospherically written.
Then it got all silly. Alien spiders my arse.
( , Thu 14 Apr 2011, 14:46, closed)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread