Tag Archive for 'poets'

Pin-Up of the Week: Dime Mystery March 1937

Dime Mystery 1937 03

A THRILL-PACKED MYSTERY NOVELETTE

THE MONSTER WHO WORKED IN CLAY

by PAUL ERNST

*

THE

BEAUTY

SHOP

HORRORS

TERROR NOVELETTE

by FRANCIS JAMES

*

DAVIS • HINES

AND OTHERS

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Queen of Darkness 2: Fever Ray

I love the “If I Had a Heart” music video by Fever Ray. I watch it over and over. It’s not every monster who can say that they’ve found themselves in a building full of dead people, singing a song about life, death, and love. Add to that the fact that she’s a really HOT monster with lots of big teeth, and it’s like the monster version of… of… a fudge sundae or something.

Hey Fever Ray, if you’re going to show us those teeth, you better be ready to use them!

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fever-ray-1

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fever-ray-5

Fever Ray doesn’t have an animal hat. Animal masks are close enough.

Animal Mask

Fever Ray has an Animal Mask

Get Fever Ray on Amazon.

Do you have anyone you would nominate for Queen of Darkness 2009? Leave a note in the comments! Be sure to provide reasons why you think so in the comment.

Happy Birthday Edward Gorey

Edward Gorey – 1925-2000. You are missed. Wikipedia entry here.

My favorite couplet by Edward Gorey.

Edward Gorey The Glorious NosebleedEdward Gorey The Glorious Nosebleed

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See one of my favorite Edward Gorey quotes here.

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Weekly Creeps: The Classics

I was reading one of my favorite sister blogs today and noticed that they were doing something that I *thought* was called the Weekly Creeps. It turns out I was just being crazy (instead of my usual stark raving mad) and it isn’t. Instead it is a cute little book club. But I did the assignment anyway. Into every meme a little darkness should fall.

1) How do you feel about classic literature? Are you intimidated by it? Love it?
Here’s the way I see it. Most things get old and then they die. But some things you can’t kill. They fester with unnatural vigor. You kill them and they come back seeking revenge from the grave. They tear at you with their hands and whisper things no sane living being is meant to hear! Wait. What was I talking about? Oh yes. Time washes away the chaff. If a book is that old and it’s still in print, then there’s a reason. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Bram Stoker’s Dracula, and Lafcadio Hearn’s unsettling Japanese ghost stories to name a few. In addition there are lesser-known greats like Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, Abrose Bierce, or Algernon Blackwood. I adore the classics! My favorite Shakespeare is, of course, Hamlet. Mostly because it’s really a ghost story but also because it’s so tragic.

2) A challenge, should you choose to accept it: Read at least one chapter of a classic novel, preferably by an author you’re not familiar with.
I will try to do that this week. The rats and I are feverishly scrabbling around to prepare for a Feng Shui specialist who will be visiting our basement to give us some much needed decorating advice. We can’t wait! Ah HA HA HA HA!

3) Let’s say you’re vacationing with your dear cousin Myrtle, and she forgot to bring a book… she only reads classic literature… What contemporary book/s with classic appeal would you pull off the shelf for her?
After I am done putting her on the rack and applying coals to her feet for being so criminally thoughtless, I will advise Myrtle to read The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova, which, with its slow pacing and attention to the landscape, hearkens back to its roots. Also, I don’t think you can go wrong with anything written by Susanna Clarke. She is dreadfully delightful. I love her writing.

4) As you explore the other Weekly Geeks posts: Did any inspire you to want to read a book you’ve never read before—or reread one to give it another chance? Tell us all about it, including a link to the post or posts that sparked your interest.
I’ll try to keep an eyeball on it.

Book Review: The Stress of Her Regard by Tim Powers

the-stress-of-her-regardThis is the kind of book we here in the Dark can really sink our teeth into. Ah HA HA HA HA ha! Imagine this: A one-eyed mentally unstable nurse, a doctor who accidentally marries a statue, bizarre medical operations, several 19th century European poets, an oppressive regime ruled by a vampire master, a secret society of blood drinkers, Percy Shelley’s heart, and an 800 year old man with a stone figure sewn into him. It does not get much darker than this, girls and boys!

The bats want me to make more sense, so here’s the set-up: Unfortunately for his fiancee, Michael Crawford, the hero of this story, unwittingly marries a monster on the day before his wedding. He is then forced to flee into a dark underworld filled with vampires, those who serve them, those who wish to serve them, and those who are victimized by them. He and his fellow-suffering famous poets Lord Byron, Percy Shelley, and John Keats work to free themselves from the curse.

Award-winning author Tim Powers turns out a straight-up horror novel. This is a real cabinet of curiosities. If I had a complaint it might be that the story is a little over-long, and the sex scenes a little less-than-erotic. Historical, mythological, and as weird as any Powers novel I’ve read, The Stress of Her Regard might be the most dark and gory. This is a nice, unsettling read, guaranteed to keep you up at night!

Creepy Factor: 4 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 3 out of 5
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: 2 out of 5

Final result: Tim Powers is currently one of my favorite authors. While this is not his best book, I still heartily recommend it. (His best books are The Anubis Gates and Three Days to Never.)

The Stress of Her Regard – Tim Powers – Tachyon Publications – 1989

View this book at Amazon.