2025 Reading Challenge discussion

This topic is about
The Weird
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
ARCHIVE 2020
>
The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories

I read the introduction and foreword today, and will be starting the actual stories October 1st. I’ll probably just go in order of the book, although I’ve seen some author names further down the index that I’m excited for! Some of my faves (King, Gaiman), and some famous names I’ve never read (like Lovecraft, Borges, Du Maurier, Murakami).
Anyone in particular you’re looking forward to reading?

I don't have it in my possession yet (I'll pick it up from the library Tuesday), so I'm not sure about all of the authors. Out of the ones listed though, I'm excited for VanderMeer, Martin, and Gaiman. VanderMeer can be pretty hit-or-miss for me so we'll see. I've never read Murakami either but I have a bunch of his on my TBR list!

I like that it's organized in order of publication so you can see how "The Weird" has evolved over time. I think I'm going to try to read about 2 stories per day.
If we need to we can extend this to a 3-month buddy read too ;)

I read the first two stories today:
The Other Side: (view spoiler)
The Screaming Skull: (view spoiler)

The Other Side: (view spoiler)
The Screaming Skull: (view spoiler)



Today’s stories:
Casting the Runes: (view spoiler)
How Nuth Would Have Practised His Art Upon the Gnoles: (view spoiler)

Casting the Runes: (view spoiler)
Nuth: (view spoiler)


(view spoiler)
I am in the middle of "The Screaming Skull" and hope to read up to/through the 4th story today :)

The man in the bottle: (view spoiler)
The dissection: (view spoiler)

Haha you’re not wrong there Alison 😂

The Man in the Bottle: (view spoiler)
The Dissection: (view spoiler)

Yes! I must have zoned out or something while reading that but I vaguely recall something to that effect now. Thank you!

The Spider: (view spoiler)
The Hungry Stones: (view spoiler)
I love that there are stories in here from many different countries!

The Spider: (view spoiler)
The Hungry Stones: (view spoiler)
I do too! I really enjoy reading the same genre from other countries to see what types of things each culture thinks is "weird." I also think it's interesting that most of these are written in first person. Maybe because in third person, the reader would expect more explanation?

My impressions of:
The Screaming Skull (view spoiler)
The Willows (view spoiler)
Sredni Vashtar (view spoiler)
Onto Casting Runes and Nuth :) I am really enjoying comparing notes with my husband on these stories...I am not much of a spooky/weird story reader (they tend to make me unsettled) but he loves them so I am happy to talk about them with him! Perfect read for October too!! :)

I read today's 2 this morning for once!
The Vegetable Man: (view spoiler)
The People of the Pit: (view spoiler)
Alison, I wish my husband would read this with me. It's just the kind of stuff he likes but he's not a big reader. He listens to scary stories and stuff on youtube. I have a pretty low tolerance for spooky stories; they unsettle me too. There's even "funny" scary stories that bother me to a point, like Shaun of the Dead. I try to read this book in the morning so I have plenty of time to focus on other things before bed haha. But I do really enjoy them and yes perfect for October!

The Vegetable Man: (view spoiler)
The People of the Pit: (view spoiler)
Alison, I have wondered that too about the Screaming Skull, (view spoiler)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3vQe...

I’m only reading one story today because I’m a bit too tired and don’t want spoil my opinion of the stories with dozing off too much. I might do an extra one tomorrow.
The Hell Screen: (view spoiler)

The Hell Screen: (view spoiler)

My thoughts on:
Casting the Runes: (view spoiler)
Nuth: (view spoiler)
The Man in the Bottle: (view spoiler)
The Dissection: (view spoiler)
The Spider (view spoiler)
The Hungry Stones: (view spoiler)

So glad you both enjoyed the video. I thought it was pretty creepy. I didn't want to get up and walk to the kitchen in the middle of the night in case there was a person-shaped hole in the wall.
Unseen - Unfeared: (view spoiler)
The Penal Colony: (view spoiler)
The White Wyrak: (view spoiler)
Alison, I'm only commenting on a few of your thoughts because I honestly don't remember some of the stories well enough to even attempt to come up with an answer.
The Man in the Bottle: (view spoiler)
The Spider: (view spoiler)

The White Wyrak: (view spoiler)
The Night Wire: (view spoiler)
I‘ve noticed that many of the introductions mention that Lovecraft loved that particular story or author. I’ve never read any Lovecraft (although I’m sure we will encounter him in this book), but he is clearly considered the big Authority here. If Lovecraft liked a Weird story, it must be a great Weird story!

The Night Wire: (view spoiler)
Yeah Lovecraft apparently changed the "Weird" game. The next story is his actually! I started it but will probably finish it tomorrow as it's a bit longer. I'm interested to find out if there are elements in his story that will turn up more and more afterwords since he's such a prominent name.

My thoughts on:
The Vegetable Man: (view spoiler)
The People of the Pit: (view spoiler)
The Hell Screen (view spoiler)

The Dunwich Horror: (view spoiler)
Alison, on The Vegetable Man: (view spoiler)
And on The Hell Screen: (view spoiler)

The Book: (view spoiler)
The Mainz Psalter: (view spoiler)

The Dunwich Horror: (view spoiler)

The Dunwich Horror: I had very high expectations of this one, but didn’t love it as much as I had hoped. It was a thrilling story but I didn’t really feel su..."
Oops, Marleen, I misread who posted the plant link...it was fabulous and added a whole lot to the vision of the story for me! ;)

I have made it to the first Lovecraft story: The Dunwich Horror and will read that later this afternoon! My husband has an HP Lovecraft anthology of stories and has read this one in the anthology (he is slowly making his way through this anthology Clunker). When I told him The Dunwich Horror is in this Weird collection of stories, he said that even though he is a couple stories behind me, The Dunwich Horror, in his opinion, is better than most of the stories he has read in The Weird...hmmmm, I will have to see....
My thoughts on:
Unseen: (view spoiler)
The Penal Colony: (view spoiler)
The White Wyrak: (view spoiler)
The Night Wire: (view spoiler)

Responding to your thoughts,
Unseen: (view spoiler)
White Wyrak: (view spoiler)
The Night Wire: (view spoiler)
And today's stories (I don't have the book in front of me so sorry if I get the titles wrong):
The Shadowy Street: (view spoiler)
The Genius Loci: (view spoiler)

The Dunwich Horror: (view spoiler)
The Book: (view spoiler)
The Main Psalter: (view spoiler)

about Dunwich: (view spoiler)
Today's stories, which I actually read yesterday and I might take a break from this book today so I can read more of The Likeness.
The Town of Cats: (view spoiler)
The Tarn: (view spoiler)

The Shadowy Street: (view spoiler)
Genius Loci: (view spoiler)

About the obsession thing, I think dehumanization is one of the major fears that we deal with. That's what makes zombies so scary. They are generally slow and not too difficult to kill, but there's a million scary movies with them because we fear becoming out of control of our mind and body. Becoming less than ourselves.
Obsession is one form of that, that is very tangible because we've all likely experienced it to some degree. You lose yourself in a sense, even with little obsessions. (Did I let the dog back inside? Did I lock the front door? I really want some soup.) All these things can take over your mind for a short while until you give in and check, or buy the soup, or eventually get over it. But the ones in these stories are more debilitating and supernatural.
I feel like I'm rambling. But there's my pop psychology analysis on the subject.

About the obsession thing, I think dehumanization is one of the major fears that we deal with. That's what makes zombies so scary. They are generally slow and not too di..."
Thank You for sharing your thoughts on obsession, SarahKat! I have always been very scared of things that can't be seen...The Omen (just the thought of it makes me shudder) and The Exorcist (although we recently watched it again - I saw it when it first came out with my girlfriends and left with bruises on my arm from my best friend grabbing me through the entire movie - and it wasn't nearly as scary as I thought ;) are two examples of the types of dehumanization that scare me!! Those have religious undertones, not the natural or monster undertones that these stories in The Weird have had so far, but anything that can't be seen and is part of a scary story affect me ;)

About the obsession thing, I think dehumanization is one of the major fears that we deal with. That's what makes zombies so scary. They are generally sl..."
I agree with you there! Instinct is "Fight or Flight." If you can't see it, you can't fight it, and you can't run from it!
Alison on The Tarn: (view spoiler)
I read two today.
Sanatorium Under the Sign of the Hourglass: (view spoiler)
Far Below: (view spoiler)

The Town of Cats: (view spoiler)
The Tarn: (view spoiler)
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Mr. Mercedes (other topics)Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre (other topics)
Dreams Underfoot (other topics)
11/22/63 (other topics)
Rebecca (other topics)
More...
Pages: 1152 pages
Length: 2 Months (October and November)
Participants: SarahKat, Marleen, Alison
Everyone reads at their own pace during a Buddy Read. Because participants can be at different parts of the book at different times, it is extremely important to mark spoilers so that the book is not ruined for someone who is not as far along as others!!!
Mark spoilers by placing {spoiler} before the text and {/spoiler} after the text but use the < and > instead of the { and }.
Happy Buddy Reading!