Monday, October 24, 2016

Horror Book # 10 - I Am Legend Richard Matheson

Image result for i am legend book cover
Stephen King is quoted somewhere as being highly influenced by Richard Matheson. After reading the short stories that are included in this collection with I Am Legend I can see that there is some similarity in their styles. The main story in the collection, I Am Legend, tells the story of the seemingly last man on Earth after everyone else has been turned into vampires. It has been turned into at least three movies I've seen and none of them are even close to being as good as the book. There's a nice twist at the end and I enjoyed rereading it.  As for the short stories, most of them are pretty good too... I think at least one of them was filmed as a Twilight Zone episode. A.-

Sunday, October 23, 2016

Horror Book # 17 - Psycho by Robert Bloch

10322582You can't really read Psycho without constantly comparing it to the film version. For the most part the movie didn't really change too much. Except for the physical description of some characters (Hitchcock changed the female characters to blondes of course and Norman is described as a chubby forty year old), some expansion of Mary/Marion's theft and flight and the delayed introduction of Norman Bates, the film sticks pretty closely to what Bloch created. The film is of course a masterpiece and full of suspenseful sequences... while the book isn't quite as thrilling. It just lacks the tension Hitchcock gave the film... but still I enjoyed it. Let's say a B+. 

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Mystery Book # 38 - The Hot Rock by Donald E. Westlake

15738143So I was at the big central library downtown and I really wanted to check out a specific horror book. But when I found it I discovered that for some reason it was listed as a "reference" book and wasn't available for checkout. At this point I wanted to find something to checkout to have something to show for the effort of going downtown... but they didn't have any of the other horror books I was looking for either... and then time started running out because if I was in the parking garage for more than an hour I'd have to pay an extra four bucks parking! So I took a quick look at my mystery reading list and tried to find something that I figured would be a good short read... Why short? Because a) I have a few other books on hold and want to be able to get to them as soon as they are available and b) for some reason I gave myself a Goodreads reading challenge and even though I know no one else cares, I feel like I have to meet that goal. And I figured I'd read enough long books this year to justify reading something really short... So having checked it out I figured I'd have to read that copy otherwise why did I check it out... but then I wanted to read the book in bed late at night and my daughter is still sleeping in the room with us and I don't want to be the one to wake up a baby with my reading light so I checked if the LAPL had a copy available for the Kindle and they did. So I didn't even read the copy I got from the downtown library. Anyway... So that's how I got around to reading The Hot Rock by Donald Westlake.

About the book... I enjoyed it but I'm sure I'll totally forget about it quickly. Fun in a disposable way. The book is the first in Westlake's Dortmunder series and follows him as he and his crew try and steal a valuable gem. However due to unforeseen circumstances something always goes wrong and they end up having to pull six different heists to steal the gem. Light and fun, B.

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

The Gunslinger - The Dark Tower I - by Stephen King

The Gunslinger.jpgMaybe five or six years ago I read the original version of The Gunslinger. When thinking about re-reading it (with the intention that I'd read the whole series), I realized that I barely remembered anything about it. This time I read the revised and expanded version and I enjoyed it as if I had never read it before. The whole book has a very dreamlike quality to it which maybe explains why it had evaporated from my memory. Plus it doesn't help that basically the gunslinger makes very little progress in his quest or that it is never really explained why he's trying to get to the dark tower in the first place.

The book follows Roland Deschain as he pursues "the man in black" across the desert in a weird fantasy world that is sort of like something out of an old Western. Roland meets different people along the way and falls into different types of traps that "the man in black" has left in his way. I enjoyed the individual scenarios that Roland encounters but they don't really add up to much as a whole. Basically it seems like the whole thing is just a build up for the next book. I'll give it a B+.

Monday, October 3, 2016

Chapterhouse: Dune by Frank Herbert

105That's it... No more Dune books for me. I didn't like the fifth book in the series and this sixth one, Chapterhouse: Dune, is no different. I'm not even sure if this one had any worms in it... and it has only passing references to melange. It doesn't take place on the planet Dune either. And then the characters that were most heavily built up in the previous book were barely used at all here... and this is the direct sequel to that story. Oh yeah... nothing happens for the first two hundred pages either. And then when the story does pick up all of the big events happen off the page. What a waste of time.

If you must know the story... the Bene Gesserit continue their war with the Honored Matres. Why the Honored Matres returned to attack the Bene Gesserit is still not explained here... so it is hard to care too much about it. Did I mention none of the characters are that interesting either? The Bene Gesserit grow a ghola clone of Miles Teg to lead their forces and when they do attack at the end they're somehow defeated... the book doesn't really say how. But then Murbella the Honored Matres turned Bene Gesserit is able to kill the leader of the Honored Matres and take over leadership and merge the two factions. Did this summary mention Duncan or Sheeana the two characters the previous book spent the whole time building up? Nope. Overall it was just super frustrating. C-.