by rsch20 » Sat 26 May 2007, 01:57:35
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TheDude', 'A')ny good titles? Actually we need a Doomer Porn thread.
I wanted to comment on this part again. It's funny how my tastes have developed.
When I was young, I was mostly interested in Fantasy, and Sci-Fi secondarily, the 'other worlds' caught my imagination.
As I matured (a little), I drifted away from most fantasy, though still read some more 'sophisticated' works, long involved multi-book series etc.
One of my enduring favorites from the fantasy field, is the 'Books of Swords' series by Fred Saberhagen.
anyway, later I went more into Sci-Fi and Horror, and I have found that over time, my 'Horror Threshold' has increased dramatically, particularly since most of it comes from reality these days.
For example, 'Freddy Kruger' was scary when I was 14... one of the repeats was on last night and I couldn't believe how childish it seems. (yes i'm drifting into t.v. examples now, but as I say they are the most accessible)
Even more serious horror like Hannibal Lecter, isn't 'scary' to me, the scale is just too small to elict a response. Since I'm aware of global risks, the fiction I read needs to match that level of threat, and a serial killer just has no chance.
recently, I've drifted away from typical 'horror', and read 'doomer porn', civilization ending stories (and singularity stories, if they existed) are about the only ones I'm interested in.
The Road was decent though not what I would consider an outstanding example, but there is very few works (let alone good works) on this topic out there.
Lucifers Hammer (i forget, its in the media forum though)
The Stand, Stephen King
Swan Song, Robert R. Mcammon
those three are
old, additionally, they are all pretty flawed in one way or another.
I went to see '28 weeks later' last week with a couple friends, and wasn't impressed. (spoiler ahead) because the whole thing was on a much smaller scale, a compound of people re-introduced to the country with american military there are wiped out by a re-emergence of the virus, big whup.
Now, I mostly read non-fiction, because it is much scarier and more interesting than anything I could get off the fiction shelves =p
Also, I don't know if this is perception or not, but when I was younger 'Non-Fiction' almost universally meant dry educational texts, with nearly everything following the 'official line'. Now, I can pick up all kinds of books that are 'subversive' in one way or another, that challenge mainstream thinking, and are inherently interesting.