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RE: The Night Gods: Chapter I - Forms Without Form

in #fiction7 years ago

wow, well done, @richq11 ! I love especially the "break" (I don't know if I'm using the right terms in English, I hope you understand ^_^) between the atmosphere in the first part and the sentences where the characther explain who he is (this last part is sharp as a knife). It's so intrigued and now I really need to read the second chapter!

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Thank you...Thank you!!! You got it! I was so worried about the transition being too abrupt. I wanted the first part to set the mood before I started to tell the story.

I think it's perfect, @richq11 ! I'm really a lover of some horror/noir writers (from E.A.Poe to S. King, from Ellroy to Koons, etc ), so you can believe me ;)

On this one, I'm shooting for H.P. Lovecraft meets Stephen King. I like the way Lovecraft uses ellipses.

I can understand you, Lovecraft is really a Maestro on the way to write, very interesting. About King, I love his subjects that connect something scary with something usual in the daily life, something usual for us that becomes a nightmare ;) Now I'm reading " The Fantastic: A Structural Approach to a Literary Genre" by Todorov, it's an old book (1970) and a bit boring, but the author examine the fantastic genre in the 1800, full of interesting input and tought ;)

Poe was the master of the 1800 horror genre, in my opinion. What I like best about King is his sense of humor... in the midst of describing some horrific scene, he'll throw in some absolutely inappropriate piece of humor. For example, he was describing a cop at a gory crime scene and says something like "he couldn't find his ass with both hands and a flashlight."

As a writer, he really isn't that good (technically). If you read his dialogues, there's seldom any adverbs. It's all "he said" or "she said." There's nothing like "he exclaimed excitedly," or anything like that. BUT, he's such a masterful storyteller, you never even notice. I probably read 20 books or more before I even noticed.

I totally agree with you. I admit that, the first time that I read a King's book (the dead zone), my thought was "There's something poor in his "way to write", even if I like the subject", so I don't read other of his books for 1 or 2 years. I decided to give him another chance and I read Carrie. It was intrigued, with some of scary and something to think about it, the charachters was very interesting (I think this is one of his strong points) and, even if it's not very good in the write, I thought his imagination is really impressive. From that moment I decide to read more and more books, except Cujo (Yes, I can't read a book where a dog is a monster :D )

LOL...I'm the same! I won't watch a movie where the dog gets killed either. I think the Dead Zone may be the book where the flashlight quote comes from. My favorite is The Stand...the classic Good vs Evil!

Yes, The Stand! Here in Italy the title is "L'ombra dello scorpione" (The shadow of scorpion) ^_^ I like it, but my favorite (maybe) is It. I like how the story run from the childhood to the adult age, where some different stories of the characters are intertwined. Sad stories are alternated to the main scary story, I think there are more metaphor in this book. Oh, of course, another of my favorite books is "Shining" ;)