Relic
19-Dec-2007, 03:51 AM
We love zombies, but I'm sure we're all lovers of the horror genre. Who are some of your favorite writers, old and new?
I'll list my top 5: (please note neither Stephen King nor Dean Koontz makes this list. Koontz is more of a suspense writer now, and King is... well, King's just bad now.)
5) Jeff Ketchum (Love his gritty style and no-holds-bar writing. Bloody but damn good. Offspring was amazing, considering it was published way back in 1981. Peaceable Kingdom is a wonderful, absolutely wonderful short story collection. Wish he'd write more...)
4) Richard Laymon (He's no longer with us, but I always admired his writing style. Bare bones and muscular, with no fat whatsoever found in any of his numerous novels. His concepts and endings are sometimes a bit stretched and unrealistic, but his pacing was absolutely amazing. A damn good dialogue writer, too.)
3) Tim Lebbon (My favorite British horror writer, bar none -- sorry Ramsey Campbell. Wish he wrote more frequently, or maybe wish there was more of HIM over here in the States and would cross that great big pond more rapidly, but I think the man's bloody brilliant.)
2) Dan Simmons (He does it all, but this guy is the one guy I read and damn near cry because he's so f'ing good. He can do it all, and effortlessly, too. And anyone who's read his most-recent "The Terror," or even the menacing "Shrike" in his famous SF Hyperion series, knows this man can raise the goosebumps with the best of them. A top-notch writer and, one day, a grand master.
1) Richard Matheson (He's kinda morphed into lefty-liberal politics, which always makes me gag, but in his prime he was on top of the world, baby. From "Hell House" to "I Am Legend" to all the best "Twilight Zone" episodes, the man could do it all. A true horror legend and probably my overall favorite writer (though Simmons is rapidly charging up from behind).
I'll list my top 5: (please note neither Stephen King nor Dean Koontz makes this list. Koontz is more of a suspense writer now, and King is... well, King's just bad now.)
5) Jeff Ketchum (Love his gritty style and no-holds-bar writing. Bloody but damn good. Offspring was amazing, considering it was published way back in 1981. Peaceable Kingdom is a wonderful, absolutely wonderful short story collection. Wish he'd write more...)
4) Richard Laymon (He's no longer with us, but I always admired his writing style. Bare bones and muscular, with no fat whatsoever found in any of his numerous novels. His concepts and endings are sometimes a bit stretched and unrealistic, but his pacing was absolutely amazing. A damn good dialogue writer, too.)
3) Tim Lebbon (My favorite British horror writer, bar none -- sorry Ramsey Campbell. Wish he wrote more frequently, or maybe wish there was more of HIM over here in the States and would cross that great big pond more rapidly, but I think the man's bloody brilliant.)
2) Dan Simmons (He does it all, but this guy is the one guy I read and damn near cry because he's so f'ing good. He can do it all, and effortlessly, too. And anyone who's read his most-recent "The Terror," or even the menacing "Shrike" in his famous SF Hyperion series, knows this man can raise the goosebumps with the best of them. A top-notch writer and, one day, a grand master.
1) Richard Matheson (He's kinda morphed into lefty-liberal politics, which always makes me gag, but in his prime he was on top of the world, baby. From "Hell House" to "I Am Legend" to all the best "Twilight Zone" episodes, the man could do it all. A true horror legend and probably my overall favorite writer (though Simmons is rapidly charging up from behind).