Horror Aficionados discussion
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Michael McDowell

http://toomuchhorrorfiction.blogspot....
I also reviewed THE ELEMENTALS:
http://toomuchhorrorfiction.blogspot....


Which Blackwater books have you read?
I blogged about him for my library (just trying to throw his name out there, lol), and I found out that he had no shame in being considered a paperback original writer, and said his goal was to get his books out to as many people as possible to enjoy. I think he might have said he didn't expect to be known hundreds of years from now like the big names, he was just happy to be read in the present.

And I love how he uses "gone" for "going."

I haven't read any of the BLACKWATER books b/c the ones I have are no.'s III, V and VI! Dammit. But yes, now I plan on acquiring and reading all his works. He has a great interview in




I still don't have Toplin. Took me years to collect all the Blackwater books.


Tressa: Yeah I know! The only thing I could figure was that either A) folks up here didn't know him and so didn't pick him up or B) somebody unloaded or lost their collection of his works. I think what I have to get yet is what? Elementals, Katie and the BLackwater books?


Guess I was lucky (twice )Once... to find these two HB"s at the library (used book) $1.00 ea
And second... I already had the series in PB's. The used book store in town here had all six!.....Don't throw anything gang!!! :)
Avon books....published 1983



Armand Rosamilia
Rigor Amortis

I looked at his entry in Wikipedia and was saddened to see he had died before reaching 50. I found the link there to Bowling Green State Univeristy's Web page on the archive they have of McDowell's manuscripts and correspondence (http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/...), which I'm sure will be of interest to scholars in the future. The title of his PhD thesis looks interesting: American Attitudes Toward Death, 1825-1865. I have read a number of archaeological works relating to funerary studies in 19th century and so I'm sure that I'd probbaly like his thesis (even if it is now a bit dated and, as a thesis, would lack the edited polish of a published book). It's a pity that he couldn't keep up his interest in academic work as well as his fiction but then I guess he wouldn't have got around to writing some of the novels and screenplays.
I haven't read anything by him yet but I look forward to doing so at some point in the future.



Ah, you hung out with the fantasy crowd, huh? Closest I ever got to that was having an embarrassing crush on a guy named Brad Carlton who worked at the mall with me up in B. Dalton bookstore on the second floor while I worked at Bressler's Ice Cream on the main floor. He actually had a Cthulhu Saves bumper sticker on his car.
First King book I ever read was Carrie, I think. Then 'Salem's Lot. Then all that I could get my hands on!

And yeah, after an American cousin introduced me to AD&D when we were 15, I remained an avid fan of role-playing games till my early thirties. While I refereed games like AD&D I very much liked playing other games like Call of Cthulhu and Warhammer Fantasy Role-Play. I wonder how many horror writers honed their writing skills and their imaginations playing role-playing games? I know that China Miéville did, but what about people like McDowell, I wonder?
Did your crush on Brad Carlton lead anywhere, Tressa? :P

I guess the role playing stuff just never appealed to me. I wouldn't be good at it. That's for brainiacs. I'm sure a lot of our great writers whet their imaginations during some role playing games. Think that might have been a little after McDowell's time, though. Maybe?
Sadly, I fucked up what could have been a great thing with Brad Carlton. I told him he looked like Art Garfunkel and he gave me the cold shoulder after telling me I should like him for who he was and not because he looked like someone. Maybe he was just afraid of girls. I don't know. Wish I could find him on FB, lol.

Sounds like Brad remains one of those 'What if?' turning points in your life, Tressa!

I'm glad I wasn't the only one engaged into role-playing games. I still love that stuff, even though I haven't played for years. Still have a couple of the original D&D books like Fiend Folio as well as a stack of monster cards!
I began reading Stephen King novels in middle school, leading into the demented mind of what Clive Barker produced in paperbacks. Before that, Edgar Allen Poe opened the door, inviting me inside the darkness, hearing the thump-thump of The Tell-Tale Heart!

Lol that's pretty much me too Brick Jr high was a great time to start Barker and King :)
I still have my Vampire: THe Masquerade book as well as my All Flesh Must be Eaten one (a zombie tabletop rpg). I was one of those poor souls that never found anyone to play with beyond a few random games :( Meanwhile my brother Josh was playing ADD and Magic with everyone, curses!


Last Night on Earth
Oh No...Zombies!!!
Zombies!!!
Zombiegeddon
i'm gonna have to dog these up and make Todd and my kid sister play :)

I was still buying Dungeon until its demise even though I hadn't played D&D for a few years. I still can't believe that magazine and Dragon were retired by Wizards of the Coast as they were high quality publications. And I still have my first and second edition AD&D stuff as well as some other games like Gamma World Science Fantasy Role-Playing Game/Boxed , Shadowrun and Heroquest (Games Workshop/MB Games [Hasbro]).
Amanda wrote: "I still have my Vampire: THe Masquerade book as well as my All Flesh Must be Eaten one (a zombie tabletop rpg). I was one of those poor souls that never found anyone to play with beyond a few random games :( Meanwhile my brother Josh was playing ADD and Magic with everyone, curses! "
I was tempted to get into Vampire: the Masquerade at one stage but I no longer had a role-playing group to play it with.
At my high school, I was able to play Gamma World with one friend when we were in the 10th and 11th grades and also Warhammer with my brother and some of his friends (they were in 7th/8th grades) but it was hard to get people to play games at the school (there was a lot of bullying there and some people didn't want to be targeted for nerdy activity like role-playing games :/). College was a different matter thankfully. :)


Last Night on Earth
Oh No...Zombies!!!
Zombies!!!
Zomb..."
Hmmm... Would wearing the Zombie Survival Medkit be an advantage when playing these games?




Yes, read Blackwater. Make sure you have all of them near you because you'll go through them like a bag of mini Reese's. Like Elementals, Blackwater has a nice southern gothic flavor to the setting and characters.
If you ever get the chance to read Katie, please do. It's a little harder to find but worth the hunt. It takes place in New York and the eerie factor is heavy.
Enjoy!



Books mentioned in this topic
Cold Moon Over Babylon (other topics)Gilded Needles (other topics)
The Amulet (other topics)
Blackwater: The Complete Saga (other topics)
Katie (other topics)
More...
The Blackwater Chronicles: A six part series about a mysterious woman who comes to live in a southern town.
Amulet: About a cursed neklace.
Elementals: About a magician's apprentice
Gilded Needles: About a murderous madame in 19th century New York.
I'm going by my memory and I haven't read these books since the early 80s.
What was great about them were they had a litle bit more gore than SK-and they're written quite well.
I hear he passed away a few years ago.