CHECK IT OUT
Even if you’re past the age for Halloween haunting, you’re never too old
for literary and audiovisual horror. From tales of terror to classic
films, you can find a grab bag of ghoulish goodies on Newport library
shelves.
Among the newest fear-inducing offerings is “The Mammoth Book of Best New
Horror,” the ninth volume in the award-winning “Best New Horror” series.
Along with chilling contributions to the horror, science fiction and
fantasy fields, find genre news and the latest about Stephen King, Dean
Koontz and even Bram Stoker on his Dracula centenary in this bedtime book
with a bite.
There are excerpts from F. Paul Wilson’s horror oeuvre of the past two
decades in “The Barrens and Others,” the first new fiction collection by
the best-selling author (and practicing physician) in years. These
first-rate tales feature a wild cast of characters in entertaining
adventures involving strange, suspect and supernatural happenings.
Equally bizarre is the gothic fiction in “Night Shade,” a new anthology
showcasing 16 eerie tales by talented mistresses of the macabre. From a
middle-aged housewife who finds her hands morphing into tattoos and
martini olives to a young woman given the powers of shape-shifting on her
25th birthday, the heroines of these stories inhabit worlds, in which the
familiar is subverted and abnormality becomes the norm.
Since the publication of Bram Stoker’s classic, no horror hero has
endured longer in readers’ imaginations than Count Dracula. In manifold
disguises, his descendants star in “Blood Thirst: 100 Years of Vampire
Fiction,” a collection of terrifying tales by such terror-lit masters as
Anne Rice, Ray Bradbury and Stephen King.
You can listen to the confessions of one of the most sympathetic and
seductive bloodsuckers in contemporary fiction on 10 audiocassettes of
“Interview With the Vampire.” While ostensibly a simple story of
immortals preying on innocents, Rice’s now-classic work explores history,
faith and philosophical concerns about evil, mortality and the limits of
human perception.
There may be no better way to celebrate the spirit of darkness than to
settle in with a classic thriller on videotape. The best of all time
include “The Birds,” one of Alfred Hitchcock’s most startling films.
Beyond its superb effects, this tense study of violence, loneliness and
complacency is a psychologically complicated work by Hollywood’s master
of suspense.
If you’re still not scared silly, treat yourself to a viewing of “The
Fall of the House of Usher,” starring a sinister Vincent Price. This
acclaimed adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s eerie tale of bloodlines and
madness captures the terrifying nuances of the original chilling tale and
is bound to reverberate in your consciousness long after All Hallows Eve
has come and gone.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams in collaboration with
Susie Lamb-Hubbs.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.