Supernatural Fiction Readers discussion
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What supernatural element is a turnoff, or you just don't like to read about?
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Danielle The Book Huntress
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Sep 01, 2010 09:25AM

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And recently it's snowballing - so I stopped reading
zombies and vampires (and even vampire zombies).

I'll also agree with Guido, although I think I'd phrase it 'preachy' books. I'm not reading a horror book to buy anything except some entertainment.


Also:
Cannibals
Zombies
Serial Killers (okay I know it's not usually supernatural, but I don't like it, period)
I really dislike the Scooby Doo plot device. It turns out it's not real after all. Major letdown.
I'm not at the point where I dislike vampires. I just think they have oversaturated the dark fantasy/urban fantasy market.
I'm not that into witches practicing as a religion theme. I like the witches who are magically gifted, not a religion-type stories.

Also:
Cannibals
Zombies
Serial Killers (okay I know it's not usually supernatural, but I don't like it, pe..."
I agree with Lady Danielle. Can't HANDLE anything with cannibals which also covers flesh-eating zombie types. Never have been able to handle that. And dislike the Scooby Doo thing, let it be real, that's why it's escapism.



You're right, Jim, it has been done to death. And none of them are any better, nothing original to add to the story.

;-)
I thought "Shaun of the Dead" was fun. I've seen that a couple of times. There was an older spoof that was fun, too. I can't think of the name, though. "Day of the Dead" was a pointless horror-fest, though. So were most of the rest.
Oh what's the name of the flicks based on that game where everyone gets infected, including our heroine? (Begins with an 'r', sounds like... damn, senior moment...) Milona ovitch is the star? She winds up being a cloned mutant, but is still hot (considering she's flat chested) & kicks everyones' ass. I guess I should consider them zombie movies, but they're more like action cartoons.
I guess the point is, zombies can be fun, either in horror or comedy, but it isn't easy anymore. Romero pretty much had the first & last word on the subject, as far as I'm concerned. That's the problem with a true classic. (My wife says "Night" is just horrible, but she doesn't think "The Rocky Horror Picture Show", "Wizards" or "Forbidden Planet" are classics, either. I mean seriously, how can anyone not like them? If she hadn't picked me, I'd say she had no taste at all...)
;-)

Shaun of the Dead and the Resident Evil movies. I watched Night of the Living Dead and it scarred me! Zombies creep me out!

That's it!!! Sheesh! I thought for minutes & couldn't bring it up. Thanks. And the chick is Milla Jovovich. I like several other movies she's been in like "The 5th Element". "Ultraviolet" was OK, too.

Resident Evil Afterlife is what it's called and this time it features Alice fighting the Umbrella Corporation who are hiding out in secret underground bases attempting to create a New World Order from the Ashes of the World they have just destroyed.
Interesting alteration in the Plot if you ask me.
And I agree, I dispise when they make a book that looks Supernatural and then it turns out it was all fake. Smoke and Mirrors and such. Like the Uninvited, I expected that the Ghosts and strange memories would have been Magic in nature but in the end it was just another horror story.

So, are we off Zombies in this one? If so, maybe I'll watch it. I just can't do another zombie movie, even if Milla's in it.
Smoke and mirrors, the worst is when it's a dream! I read Son of Rosemary: The Sequel to Rosemary's Baby, set 20 or so years after the original, and it was pretty good...until she wakes up and it was just a dream. Man, I threw that book across the room and then into the garbage. I feel cheated when they do that. Don't waste my time, it just pisses me off.

I guess that brings up a supernatural element I really hate - overdoing the same thing. That can be tough to do since many supernatural/horror elements have been with us forever (fear of the dark, unexpected noises & such) but if they're not presented in a new pattern, they become much less horrible because they're familiar.
Movies especially suffer from this. Some idiot always goes out alone & gets horribly killed. Never stand near any kind of hole in the floor, something will grab your leg. Never go to an old, creepy house during a storm at night.



It's streaming instantly on Netflix, for those who have it.
Best,
Tim



Werewolves are a complete turnoff to me for the most part in film & books, although I like the original Wolfman starring Lon Chaney Jr. That's probably because it's more of a tragedy than a horror story, or that's the way I see it. I really felt for his character.
I agree with the posters who said anything that turns out to be a dream is just a stupid cop-out. It says to me that the author couldn't come up with a good ending and threw in the towel.

The only trouble with a reworking is that it can fall under the headline of franchise reboot,re-envisaging, alternative takes, and that dreaded word 'remake'. Either it will be;
1) Derivative with slight slterations; Underworld, Twilight
unsatisfactorily re-envisioned which will draw traditionalists like pirahna's to blood; The WolfMan, The Dummy Mummy trilogy
The fact that other supernatural sources have also been tapped almost dry; as in aliens, UFOs strange Eastern-inspired ghost stories ( The Ring, The Grudge etc)
So, what else is there? Is there hope for the genre?

As discussed on one of our other threads, this genre meets certain kinds of wants or needs, for many of us, in our reading experience. These needs seem to be pretty much constants in human psychology, generation after generation; and they don't require extreme variety or novelty for their fulfillment. In fact, part of the appeal of this kind of literature is from familiarity, not novelty; we turn to it precisely because we know what to expect, and we want exactly what we're expecting. Of course, we crave some novelty and variety, too. That element comes from the infinite variety of individual styles, plot events, settings, characterizations, etc. that the imagination of individual writers can conceive, even within the constraints of certain foundational assumptions and conventions. So I think there's still vitality in the supernatural genre, and always will be. (And of course there are occasionally significant new developments that build on the foundation and open up a new wing --like the shift from vampires as evil automatons with teeth to actual characters with personalities and moral choices.) In a sense, the Hebrew sage was right 3,000 years ago that there's "nothing new under the sun;" but in another sense, each freshly crafted book or story is something new, its own contribution to the tradition.
All of that said, if you never read anything but supernatural fiction (or Westerns, or mysteries, or mainstream "general" fiction, or whatever), if you're like most people, you'll eventually get glassy-eyed and wonder if there's any hope that the genre can become fresh and interesting again. When that happens, a vacation in the pages of some other genre might be what the doctor would order! :-)

Although vampires are currently going through a teenage angst phase, there are other current books such as The Historian which resurrect the origins of the lore and appeal to those who prefer the classic take on vampires.




I also would add, I like seeing how different authors can make a tried and true subject fresh.


Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" wrote: "Zombies get me in two ways: 1)fear of infection is a big thing for me, 2)gore and violence, plus cannibalism--all weak areas for me."
me also! I do not want to read about them at all.
me also! I do not want to read about them at all.
Lady Danielle "The Book Huntress" wrote: "Is there a supernatural theme that will cause you to avoid reading a book? Such as vampires, ghosts, demons, angels, reincarnation, etc?"
I am not able to read about demons altho Charlaine Harris ones are OK. But I am thinking of years ago The Exorcist! That was too scary for me. I carefully avoided it.
I am not able to read about demons altho Charlaine Harris ones are OK. But I am thinking of years ago The Exorcist! That was too scary for me. I carefully avoided it.




Thank u so much for adding it. I just checked my email and finished my profile. Please let me know where I can sign up for the program. And by the way, I'm reading Angels & Demons (I know I'm late to the party) u guys have probably already read that.


To learn about the Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author Program, just click on "explore" on the Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ toolbar at the top of any page on the site; then choose "authors" from the pull-down menu. That will take you to a page with a link to the Authors Program right up near the top (on your right as you face the screen). The page that links to has complete information (or links to it), and all that you need to get yourself listed and to turn your Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ profile into an author profile.
P.S. --I haven't read Angels and Demons (or any of Brown's work) either. My oldest daughter read that book, but she panned it.

I read The Da Vinci Code, I liked it, but I went to Catholic schools all my life. We were actually taught about some of the things he wrote about.
I have to admit the whole Jesus was a "baby's daddy" thing was new. But, my sister went to a Luthern school when she was younger and she was taught that Jesus had a kid. Go figure!

Please STOP!!! Butcher is making money hand over fist. He can afford a decent editor & a gaggle of proofreaders. Heck, he could get the latter for free here on GR. I do it for free for several authors.


I don't like books about "good" vampires, or "good" fallen angels. People say they're different from demons, but it's NOT true.
I don't mind books about demons as long as they're not saving the world, but I hate angel books. They always seem slightly... warped. I feel guilty after, and even upset, because the writers always seem to mess the story up so badly.


Sherry - all I can say is that if all of the great monsters turn you off then you haven't been reading the right books.... Laurell K. Hamilton - excellent heroine - BA - and the monsters are sexy,cut throat and the history and charactization believable. Keep searching - there are more stories out there. Not your same story, different people, different setting - don't pick up the standard series. Look for the oddities - you'll find some monsters that rock.
Best ~ K.
Jim wrote: "Not limited to supernatural elements, but I HATE logic errors. I'm reading an urban fantasy right now, Blood Rites, the 6th Harry Dresden novel & I just want to smack [author:Jim Butc..."

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Alice Borchardt (other topics)George R.R. Martin (other topics)
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Jim Butcher (other topics)
Dale Brown (other topics)