Brushed off the kindle on a whim, trying to see how the screen change my sleep schedule. I'm taking a liking for the little thing, years late, but now I'm annoyed by the perspective of having to change it one day and have no fucking button option.
Continued The Weird by Jeff Vandermeer and fell in love with...
'Same Time, Same Place' by Mervyn Peake
Some evening, a young man who lives with his parents realize that he can't stand them anymore, that he can't stand his life, that he has to go out.
He will discover that even in the cities, the night can harbor some very disturbing things.
Short, to the point, creepy. The sort of story that lingers in your mind when you turn the lights out. Nothing horrible, just creepy.
I now clearly have to read Gormenghast.
And I just started...
'Malpertuis' by Jean Ray
My first 'hey I loved his work in The Weird, let's try another story.' One of his most famous, with a movie adaptation featuring Orson Wells.
The owner of a demented manor coupled with a store is dying. He summons his family and friends and make them an offer they can't refuse.
What a mess, I already had tried reading it years ago and can see why I dropped it. The beginning is slow, the narration is confusing, and Jean Ray frequently use a vocabulary that flies one mile over my head. And I'm was not a fan of the type of horror the book go for sometimes with one specific character, very eccentric, phantasmagorical ?
But you take a liking to the characters and yesterday the story genuinely creeped me out. Again, nothing that horrible, just plain unnatural. So good.
There are some seriously good prose too, had to underline a paragraph for the first time in years.
I'm not sure I will get it, like 'The Shadowy Street' that was so great in The Weird by the way (read it, how to creep the reader with... stillness), but when it's good, it's very good.