Happiness Is...
Oct. 19th, 2006 06:50 pmHappiness is:
Finally* receiving a box from Subterranean Press with CaitlĂn Kiernan's The Dry Salvages, Low Red Moon and Poppy Z. Brite & Christa Faust's Triads.
More reading material for the pile, yay!
* From a pre-order dating back to 2004, with most items released in 2005. And it only took over a dozen emails, a letter, a fax and a message on their answering machine to finally receive it.
Finally* receiving a box from Subterranean Press with CaitlĂn Kiernan's The Dry Salvages, Low Red Moon and Poppy Z. Brite & Christa Faust's Triads.
More reading material for the pile, yay!
* From a pre-order dating back to 2004, with most items released in 2005. And it only took over a dozen emails, a letter, a fax and a message on their answering machine to finally receive it.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-20 11:43 pm (UTC)Well, actually it is practically non-existent in Ireland. There's no club night here in Galway and only one in the two biggest cities which play everything, and it is somewhat offputting. Plus I live in the third biggest city, and I'm the only goth I know and make regular contact(spookykids and doomcookies excepted). Granted, there are a few cases where they might be goth, and the fogeys, but that's it and I don't know any others.
Fuck it though. The local House/Funk pub is better then the local rock/metal place
(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-21 04:59 am (UTC)Okay, not that I've been near a club since before Dashiell was born, but that's so beside the point :P
Back to books... EC is a 98/99 publication I think? so things have changed there a bit, mostly in subject matter. To the despair of some fans, Poppy has moved onto different subjects, stories set in the restaurant world. Personally, I've always enjoyed her writing, her style, so the change in subject matter doesn't bother me. I don't read certain authors solely because they write in a certain genre. There's the added bonus that I used to work in my cousin's restaurant, so there's a little bit of stuff that I recognise too. I can highly recommend her work from any genre really.
The book that got her the most reknown, Lost Souls, "the vampire book" clutched desperately by some spookykids, isn't my favourite of hers. I enjoyed it, don't get me wrong, but of the work she did in that period, Drawing Blood appealed to me more.
It's hard for me to compare current Kiernan with older Brite, because I haven't read Exquisite Corpse in quite a few years, and with both authors I've followed their stylistic and even genre progressions over the past 8 or so years, so it's a lot more gradual for me. Maybe if I read them shortly after one another it'd smack me in the face more... but I barely have enough time to get through the new books in my To Read stack, let alone re-read much, lol.