Showing posts with label richard sala. Show all posts
Showing posts with label richard sala. Show all posts

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Sunday Supplement 11/3/13

One my favorite Halloween reads was Richard Sala's graphic novel, Delphine. Look this one up online and it'll no doubt be described as a horrific retelling of Snow White from a male perspective. While that's certainly an accurate description, what I love most about Delphine is the terrific reboot of an old horror archetype -- the tale of a stranger looking for answers in a cursed small town. Put Delphine in that fictive neighborhood, and the setting for Sala's tale isn't that far from Lovecraft's New England stomping grounds (or Whitewood, Massachusetts, the mysterious 'burg in an old horrorshow fave of mine -- City of the Dead). What makes Sala's work special is that he manages to have his enchanted apple and eat it, too -- his work echoes classic horror tropes while not at all settling into the pale shadows of homage. This is fresh and vital stuff... and that bit about God being a giant spider? That's a bucketful of creepy, right there.

And while I'm at it, let's go classic with the trailer for every monsterkid's favorite immolatin' cultist frightfest:


Interesting piece on the enduring power of Stephen King's Carrie. I'm currently revisiting some early King with a reread of Night Shift, the first King book I encountered way back when. I'd forgotten a lot of these stories and am enjoying them greatly... more on that when I turn the last page.

This Tumbler's a big green electrified keeper.

Norman.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Sunday Supplement 11/11/12

Don't know how I missed Dale Watson until now. I've about worn out The Sun Sessions and The Truckin' Sessions, and it looks like I have many more good CDs to pick up.

Yes. You read that right. I still buy CDs. They'll still be spinnin' when your iPod is dead and buried and all your virtual music has flown the coop.

File this under required reading: 25 Best Horror Novels of the New Millennium. Dark Harvest is in some fine company, and I am stoked.

I had the pleasure of writing the introduction for Laird Barron's next collection from Night Shade Books. Nope, you can't order it yet. My favorite story? "The Men from Porlock." That one would make H. P. Lovecraft cry for his mama. Seriously.

Haven't read Laird's novel, The Croning, yet? Pull that trigger, son!

The last two years, I've sworn I'm going to blog about Richard Sala at Halloween. Didn't happen. You can check him out here. If you're a monsterkid, you won't be sorry. Sala twists up everything you remember from your youth -- Universal Horrors, E. C. Comics, old pulp stories -- and somehow makes it all fresh and vital (i.e. "It's alive! It's alive!")