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Stephen King and Dean Koontz.

2007-02-15 13:44:40 · 8 answers · asked by IzzieB 3 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

8 answers

Clive Barker is probably the best. "Imajica" will blow away anything King or Koontz have ever written or will ever write. Barker is the "Hellraiser" and "Candyman" guy (along with others), so that shows he's pretty decent. "Imajica." Remember it. Read it.
John Saul is more of the dark horror than Barker's literary quality work. Saul has numerous well-written books about countless subjects. My suggestion is to read "Black Creek Crossing," as that's the best one I've read so far...though I haven't been disappointed yet.
Brian Keene is a relatively new author with several novels to his credit. I have only read "The Conqueror Worms," which I read because I thought it would be hilariously terrible. Instead, it was very good and I recommend it to everyone. I never thought I'd say it, but he made giant killer earthworms believable.
H.P. Lovecraft is popular, as is Neil Gaiman. I prefer the former and don't much care for the latter, but Gaiman has a wide audience.
If you read "The Best of Roald Dahl," you won't see too much bloodshed and supernatural/otherwordly interference, but I doubt King or Barker could write stories like Dahl. And Koontz wouldn't even be fit to write the foreward. Dahl's short stories are dark and twisted, though probably not horror.
A good choice is to get "The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror" or "The Mammoth Book of Best New Terror." The anthologies feature numerous authors and you can always find someone you'd enjoy in there.
Stoker's "Dracula" destroys most conventional horror and is a must read.
Check the Bram Stoker awards for more popular authors.

2007-02-15 15:27:38 · answer #1 · answered by fuzzinutzz 4 · 0 0

Edgar Allan Poe & Cornell Woolrich. I kind of assume most people have heard of Poe. Woolrich is not as well known, but he was extremely influential - he is one of the main sources for the first "film noir" movies and he had at least one story used for a Twilight Zone (the original) episode - "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes." He was not strictly "horror" as some may view the genre -perhaps "horror-suspense" would be a better description.

Also, Charles Beaumont, many of whose stories were used on the original Twilight Zone.

And you could add 2 more classics- Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" & Bram Stoker's "Dracula."

2007-02-16 06:02:38 · answer #2 · answered by Ray 4 · 0 0

If you really want a good horror book that will just creep you out and keep you thinking, I recommend House of Leaves by Mark Danielewski.
And in short fiction, the best horror writer ever is still H.P. Lovecraft.

2007-02-15 14:54:37 · answer #3 · answered by LupLun 4 · 0 0

There are two writers who work together. Try reading "A Still Life with Crows" By Douglas Preston and Lincoln Childs. There is a great character by the name of Agent Pendergast. If you like this book then read "a Cabinet of Curiosities".

2007-02-15 13:54:38 · answer #4 · answered by marysouth67 1 · 1 0

Bentley Little, his books are great! He is an adult horror writer.Also John Saul, Grahm Masterson, Peter Straub, and John Farris are good writers.

2007-02-15 15:01:00 · answer #5 · answered by macybluedawn 5 · 0 0

Clive Barker - though a lot of his stuff is rather adult fairy tales (though gorey at the same time).

Chuck Palahniuk wrote a book called Haunted which is kind of horrorish - it's rather graphic.

2007-02-15 13:49:34 · answer #6 · answered by forestpirate 3 · 1 0

study-alikes: no one writes "a useless ringer for" Stephen King. Having tried for years to make suggestions to my son, one in each and every of King's mind-blowing followers, I communicate from intimate expertise of failure in this the front. luckily, there are authors who furnish some similar satisfactions. One pair of favourite Suspense authors, Douglas J. Preston and Lincoln newborn, furnish form-blending titles that contain lots of the elements King's readers savour: quick-paced adventures, progression suspense, sympathetic characters, often a conflict hostile to evil, and a horror which will properly be overwhelmed down yet no longer destroyed. Their first identify, Relic, with its supernatural monster unleashed in a variety large apple museum, comes closest to truly Horror, and readers who delight in that would come across added. King's call is maximum often appropriate with Dean R. Koontz, yet another author in numerous, regularly blended genres. Like King, Koontz's thoughts characteristic a solid of personable characters enthusiastic about quick-paced, deadly battles between solid and evil. Koontz, too, writes in a spread of genres, including Horror, myth, and psychological Suspense. followers of King's Black domicile ought to attempt Koontz's From the nook of His Eye. Peter Straub, co-author of two books with King and a Horror author in his personal actual, also should be suggested. Like King, he makes a speciality of characters, unearths Horror in the commonplace, and fills his works with ghost thoughts and nightmares, to boot as psychological undertones. Mr. X is a modern get mutually. yet another author who crosses genres easily is Dan Simmons, and his evocative horror novels furnish many satisfactions for King's followers, including quick-paced and in contact tale strains, personable protagonists, ominous undertones which substitute into undesirable circumstances, evocative settings, and pleasant resolutions. attempt summer of evening, which some imagine is even more beneficial advantageous than King's It. from time to time a unmarried identify through an author makes an effective advice. Ray Bradbury's classic tale of the diabolical carnival, some thing depraved this kind Comes, would fulfill readers who loved King's Bag of Bones. Orson Scott Card's Homebody, a Horror novel with underlying difficulty concerns of redemption, healing, and desire, also should be suggested to readers. besides the undeniable fact that a number of titles through Robert R. McCammon would paintings for King readers, Boy's existence is a very evocative tale of small city existence and Horror that grows from the conventional.

2016-12-04 05:53:26 · answer #7 · answered by winkles 4 · 0 0

uh, Ann(e) Rice writes about vampires but i don't know if you would consider that 'horror' exactly... it's pretty good though. i recommend Queen of the Damned.

2007-02-15 14:40:02 · answer #8 · answered by beneaththemangotree12 2 · 0 1

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