What I'm Listening To: baby birds chirping in the walls...; apparently, we have a woodpecker nest in the siding of our house. I'm sure there's a story idea in there somewhere!
Something Cool: I watched the Doctor Who spinoff show, Class, recently. I blogged about it at Speculative Chic!
Venessa's Top 5 Books Found on Her Shelf
Okay, read this with the caveat that these choices can often changes with my mood... So I could likely do this once a month and come up with a mostly different list!
These are all books that have had a profound effect on me in some way, whether to influence my writing or my life in general. There isn't a whole lot of genre consistency here. I have several genres that I love to read in (urban fantasy, horror, mystery/thriller).
Something they do all have in common is that they’re old (of course, I’m old, so there’s that…). If you have some great books with a more recent publication date, drop them in the comments! My TBR pile is certainly not big enough :)
Okay, here we go!
5. Interview with the Vampire – Anne Rice
Love her or hate her, Anne Rice created a brand new subgenre protagonist: the romantic vampire. I remember this being on my mom's bookshelf when I was about ten or so and I read it not too long after that. I was blown away by the sheer atmosphere of it. It put New Orleans on my bucket list to visit, which I finally did a couple decades later.
4. Hotel Transylvania – Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
And if Anne Rice invented the romantic vampire, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro perfected it and, in turn, helped to create another subgenre: historical paranormal romance. I fell in love with the Count Saint Germain and continued to remain in love with him throughout my life. This book, and those that followed, gave me a great appreciation for the richness of history, because Yarbro wrote with such eloquence and lush detail. I eventually ended up a history major at college.
3. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy – Douglas Adams
DON’T PANIC!
If you've read the Guide, you know why it's on this list. If you haven't, you should. And then you'll know why it's on this list. You’ll meet Ford Prefect, Zaphod Beeblebrox, Trillian, Marvin, and, of course, Arthur Dent. All great fun! You’ll be a convert, I promise.
Also, gave me a great appreciation for towels.
2. The Stand – Stephen King
I debated between this and Different Seasons, which is the first Stephen King book I ever read. I plowed through The Stand over a family vacation in Wisconsin when I was 14. It caught my attention and kept me entranced and, of course, I had to finish it before the end of the vacation, because it was on a bookshelf in the cabin we were renting, so I couldn't take it home with me. I spent the majority of that trip either in my room at the cabin, reading, or carting that book around with me. It was worth it. And it made me a SK fan forever.
1. The Count of Monte Cristo – Alexandre Dumas
Truly, if you haven't read this book, you should. It is one of the most brilliant and vivid stories of revenge ever written, in my opinion. I believe most writers can learn from his use of deceit and strategy in this book. I loved it so much, I used to read this book every single year for a couple decades, but have gotten out of that habit in recent years. I need to go back to it.
So there are the top 5 books on my shelves! Have you read any of them? What are your top books?
It's hard for me to pin down favorite fiction. I read more of it in my youth. But my favorite Stephen King novel is Pet Sematary.
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That was a really good one. My favorite SK books are Misery (terrifying, because it's so real) and It. I hated the ending of It, for a number of reasons, but the book in its entirety was so good, I forgave the crappy ending ;)
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Yes, I agree with you on Misery. Very frightening and you can't shoo it away like the supernatural stuff.
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