Home » Posts tagged "libraries" (Page 11)

The Top 10 Horror Stories: Stephen Jones’ Picks

There’s a short but very interesting article by Stephen Jones at Publisher’s Weekly. Jones, editor of the recently published anthology A Book of Horrors (which received an enthusiastic review from our own Dave Simms– you can read the review here). Jones named his top ten picks for horror stories, and I’m going to link to his list here. See if you agree!

The authors he mentions are well-known in the genre, and if you don’t know exactly where you can find the stories he mentions, most of them have collections or longer works that might already be in your library. Some of the choices are ones you might not expect, like Ray Bradbury, who’s frequently defined as a science fiction writer, so it’s a great opportunity to market the horror genre to a new audience. You could do a great display bringing some of these to light!

Awesomeness in Ebook Publisher/Library Agreements

In Internet time, I’m extremely late to report it, but awesomeness has occurred. The Douglas County Library System in Colorado, which has been working with alternatives to the licensing of ebooks  from publishers (also called purchasing them outright from publishers). And this week DCL signed a contract (called the Common Understanding) with Smashwords, in which they purchased 10,000 books outright. Califa, a library consortium in California, which has also been exploring alternatives to licensing ebooks through OverDrive, is expected to follow suit. Read Peter Brantley’s piece on this at PWxyz, where he does an excellent and thorough job of going over the whole thing. Hopefully other publishers are paying attention!

Back to School: Robert Louis Stevenson– Yet Another Reason to Read the Classics

When you think of classics in the horror genre– and by classics here I mean mostly horror titles that are no longer under copyright– there are names that come easily to mind. Edgar Allan Poe, Bram Stoker, and Mary Shelley, or at least the movies based on their books, are surely familiar to most people. H.P. Lovecraft, in spite of his influence, is a little more obscure to the general public, but most people with even a passing knowledge of horror fiction probably recognize his name. Chances are you can find their works easily, if not actually in the high school classroom, at least in the high school library… and certainly, you should be able to get them at the local public library!

But there are also authors that might surprise you, at least a little. My introduction to Robert Louis Stevenson was A Child’s Garden of Verses. You know,

How do you like to go up in a swing,
Up in the air so blue?
Oh, I do think it the pleasantest thing
Ever a child can do!

That the author of idyllic children’s verse and such boys’ adventure novels (yes, I know girls read them and love them, too) as Treasure Island and Kidnapped could take the turn of imagination he did to write “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” intrigues me, but as with many other iconic monsters that have taken hold in our own imaginations, Jekyll and Hyde have taken on life of their own, and I suspect the average person hasn’t noticed the author is the same, if they’ve read the original story at all. Stevenson’s imagination turned in this direction more than once, though, and I thought I’d share a story today that the folks at HorrorHomework.com posted online, which illustrates the perils and horrors of trying to impress the wrong teacher, and of bowing to peer pressure. And so I present to you Robert Louis Stevenson’s gruesome and disturbing “The Bodysnatcher”(It’s possible that you may have to listen to Christopher Walken reading “The Raven” as well, but, while it distracts from the reading experience, it’s definitely worth a listen).

Enjoy!