icepixie: ([Other] Book)
[personal profile] icepixie
O Flist, I find myself in the mood for ghost story/haunted house/otherwise paranormally creepy-type novels. I do have a preference for...um..."atmospheric," I guess you'd call it? over blood-n-guts. My favorite ghost-related novel is James P. Blaylock's Winter Tides, which I like because the foggy, wintry California beach setting is so vivid, the characters are fun and quirky, and there are lots of tension-inducing scenes of people walking through fog and hearing ghostly footsteps and the like.

I've read everything of Poe that I care to, and I've also got The Haunting of Hill House, The Turn of the Screw, Carrie, and House of Leaves under my belt, but beyond that I'm wide open for recs. Classics are as good as obscure gems, because I don't read much horror/paranormal and probably haven't read them.

Date: 2011-07-20 08:06 pm (UTC)
graycardinal: Shadow on asphalt (Default)
From: [personal profile] graycardinal
For all that they're immensely popular, the Peabody series is just eccentric enough to be something of an acquired taste. There's also a case to be made that the various Peters series rely a little too much on their heroines' innate invincibility. I'm very fond of the Peabody books, but they definitely are not everyone's cup of tea.

Fortunately, there are a good many stand-alone Peters titles that stand up quite well as good light mystery/romances with strong female leads. And in her Michaels persona, the author noticeably shifts tone; where the Peters books often have a very genre-aware sense of humor, the Michaels books mostly trade this for a strong genre-aware sense of atmosphere.

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