gilda_elise: (Books - Reading raven)
[personal profile] gilda_elise
The Regulators


Author of the bestselling novel Thinner and four thrillers that have sold millions in an omnibus edition entitled The Bachman Books, the late Richard Bachman has been described as "Stephen King without a conscience." Now he performs an eerie encore with the posthumous release of The Regulators, a harrowing story of a suburban neighborhood in the grip of surreal terror.

It's a summer afternoon in Wentworth, Ohio, and on Poplar Street everything's normal. The paper boy is making his rounds; the Carver kids are bickering at the corner convenience store; a Frisbee is flying on the Reeds' lawn; Gary Soderson is firing up the backyard barbecue. The only thing that doesn't quite fit is the red van idling just up the hill. Soon it will begin to roll, and the killing will begin. A quiet slice of American suburbia is about to turn to toast.

The mayhem rages around a seemingly still point, a darkened house lit fitfully from within by a flickering television screen. Inside, where things haven't been normal for a long time, are Audrey Wyler and the autistic nephew she cares for, eight-year-old Seth Garin. They're fighting their own battle, and its intensity has turned 247 Poplar Street into a prisonhouse.

By the time night falls on Poplar Street, the surviving residents will find themselves in another world, one where anything, no matter how terrible, is possible…and where the regulators are on their way. By what power they have come, how far they will go, and how they can be stopped-these are the desperate questions. The answers are absolutely terrifying.


It’s certainly true that, under the Bachman pseudonym, King’s writing becomes darker. This book is a prime example of that. There are no small number of victims, either by a harrowing death, or through a as just as harrowing life.

The story takes place all within one day, though the reader is given a background of sorts through Audrey Wyler’s journal and by a letter written to her by someone from who she tries to get information. But because it is all happening within the span of one day, the horror is unrelenting. The characters are given almost no breathing room as they try to fight back.

But neither is the reader. It’s one thing after the other, so the story can get a bit mind-numbing at times. Plus, it gives you little time to get to know the characters. There were a few that I felt I was beginning to like, but it never got much further than that.

So, while an entertaining read, it’s not one of my favorite King books. It’s been years since I read it, so it’ll be interesting rereading its linked book, Desperation.



Mount TBR

Mount TBR 2025 Book Links 1-25 )

26. Lost and Found by Marilyn Harris
27. Strange Weather: Four Short Novels by Joe Hill
28. Three Wild Dogs by Markus Zusak
29. Full Throttle by Joe Hill
30. Lost in a Good Book (Thursday Next #2) by Jasper Fforde
31. Elder Race by Adrian Tchaikovsky
32. Hearts in Atlantis by Stephen King
33. Pearly Everlasting by Tammy Armstrong
34. The Women of Troy (Women of Troy #2) by Pat Barker
35. The Conjurers by Marilyn Harris
36. The Regulators by Richard Bachman (Pseudonym), Stephen King


Goodreads 38


2025 I read Horror.jpg

Katsu, Ketchum, King, or Koontz
1. You Like It Darker by Stephen King
2. Hearts in Atlantis by Stephen King
3. The Regulators by Richard Bachman (aka Stephen King)


2025 Monthly Motif.jpg

JUL - “Single Day Story”
Read a book that takes place over the course of a single day.


The Regulators by Stephen King

The Conjurers by Marilyn Harris

Jul. 2nd, 2025 01:23 pm
gilda_elise: (Books - Reading raven)
[personal profile] gilda_elise
The Conjurers


Each year thousands of tourists visit the huge, prehistoric stones, marveling at their awesome size and mystery. Then one group came not to marvel but to resurrect the dark primal magic of Druid horror; to call up the unholy power that had once reigned supreme; to loose its terrifying occult power again on an unsuspecting world. They called themselves The Conjurers.

Harris is a good writer; I truly enjoyed The Portent. But she has the unfortunate habit of often leaving too much unexplained. The characters don’t ask the questions that most people would ask, do things that you can’t help but wonder what the hell they’re thinking.

This is especially true of the main character, Easter Mulraven. Her husband mysteriously disappeared years before. Her parents are dead. Lonely, she starts taking in the young people who wander into the village. She asks nothing about them; seems to be under the spell of one particularly striking young man. But the people of the village want them gone. They won’t really tell her why, other than a rather odd warning “they’re evil.”

There are some truly gruesome and terrifying events that take place, but since everyone talks, and thinks, in riddles, it’s hard to figure what exactly is going on. I’m still not totally sure.



Mount TBR

Mount TBR 2025 Book Links 1-25 )

26. Lost and Found by Marilyn Harris
27. Strange Weather: Four Short Novels by Joe Hill
28. Three Wild Dogs by Markus Zusak
29. Full Throttle by Joe Hill
30. Lost in a Good Book (Thursday Next #2) by Jasper Fforde
31. Elder Race by Adrian Tchaikovsky
32. Hearts in Atlantis by Stephen King
33. Pearly Everlasting by Tammy Armstrong
34. The Women of Troy (Women of Troy #2) by Pat Barker
35. The Conjurers by Marilyn Harris


Goodreads 37


2025 I read Horror.jpg

Written by a female author
1. The Conjurers by Marilyn Harris
gilda_elise: (Books - World at Feet)
[personal profile] gilda_elise
The Women of Troy


A daring and timely feminist retelling of The Iliad from the perspective of the women of Troy who endured it—an extraordinary follow up to The Silence of the Girls from the Booker Prize-winning author of The Regeneration Trilogy.

Troy has fallen and the victorious Greeks are eager to return home with the spoils of an endless war—including the women of Troy themselves. They await a fair wind for the Aegean.

It does not come, because the gods are offended. The body of King Priam lies unburied and desecrated, and so the victors remain in suspension, camped in the shadows of the city they destroyed as the coalition that held them together begins to unravel. Old feuds resurface and new suspicions and rivalries begin to fester.

Largely unnoticed by her captors, the one time Trojan queen Briseis, formerly Achilles's slave, now belonging to his companion Alcimus, quietly takes in these developments. She forges alliances when she can, with Priam's aged wife the defiant Hecuba and with the disgraced soothsayer Calchas, all the while shrewdly seeking her path to revenge.



While perhaps not as exciting as the first book there is still much going on. And though much of this wasn’t in The Iliad, Barker allows us to get to know the characters by giving them this lull in the action. Troy has been defeated, but the Greeks are unable to sail for home due to a wind that constantly blows toward shore.

But, as in the first book, the protagonist is Briseis, given to Achilles as a war prize and now carrying his child. Wed to one of his lieutenants, she is no longer a slave, giving her more latitude in where she goes and what she does. Still, she is not exactly free. Caught between the Greeks and the Trojan women who are now slaves, she creates her own world that is part of both.

I know some readers didn’t care for the lack of action, but I found it a wonderful way to actually get to know the characters. Usually it’s battles I have to skim through, glassy-eyed from one too many deaths (it’s a rare writer who can make them interesting for me.) Here, the days pass slowly, their lives in stasis.

For the women, their homes are gone. They wait to see what will become of them.



Mount TBR

Mount TBR 2025 Book Links 1-25 )

26. Lost and Found by Marilyn Harris
27. Strange Weather: Four Short Novels by Joe Hill
28. Three Wild Dogs by Markus Zusak
29. Full Throttle by Joe Hill
30. Lost in a Good Book (Thursday Next #2) by Jasper Fforde
31. Elder Race by Adrian Tchaikovsky
32. Hearts in Atlantis by Stephen King
33. Pearly Everlasting by Tammy Armstrong
34. The Women of Troy (Women of Troy #2) by Pat Barker


Goodreads 36

self-censorship

Jun. 27th, 2025 02:02 pm
rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
[personal profile] rivkat

no good, very bad thing: for the first time ever, I carefully concealed my Star of David scrunchie to do an interview in case it became a distraction. I try hard not to self-censor, but ...


gilda_elise: (Books - Reading raven)
[personal profile] gilda_elise
The Staircase in the Woods


A group of friends investigates the mystery of a strange staircase in the woods.

While on a camping trip, five high-schoolers bound by an oath to always protect one another discover something in the middle of the forest: a mysterious staircase to nowhere. One friend climbs up but does not come back down. Then the staircase disappears. Twenty years later it reappears, and the friends return to find the lost boy—and what lies beyond the staircase.


While it’s a really creepy story, I didn’t enjoy it as much as I have some of Wendig’s other books. Maybe because, while I found the story compelling and unputdownable, I think the fact that I didn’t care all that much for the characters sort of ruined things. Not terribly, just enough for me to wish that at least one character had been written more likably.

Yet, at the same time, I’m not sure that would have worked. The four remaining characters are all pretty flawed, with some major issues. In that, it worked that the one character who was basically a nice guy is the one who goes missing, because a lot of the what was going on dealt with those issues. Unfortunately, that’s what made the characters not so likable.

It also seemed that none of them had grown much. One would think that, pushing forty, the characters would have more sense. I had a hard time seeing them as adults, their actions often being that of a teenager.

Having said all that, I still enjoyed the story, because it is a good story. And what was happening really tended to outweigh who it was happening to.


Goodreads 35

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