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Nocturnes
Nocturnes
Author: John Connolly
In his first collection of short fiction, New York Times bestselling author John Connolly offers a selection of dark, daring, and utterly haunting tales. Here are lost lovers and missing children, predatory demons, and vengeful ghosts. In "The New Daughter," a father comes to suspect that a burial mound on his land hides something very an...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780743270199
ISBN-10: 0743270193
Publication Date: 3/22/2005
Pages: 416
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 12

4 stars, based on 12 ratings
Publisher: Atria
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 2
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

marcijo28 avatar reviewed Nocturnes on + 325 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Nocturnes is fantastic. It's the best short stories book I've read in a long time. John Connolly can write creepy-crawly excellently! I highly recommend this book.
reviewed Nocturnes on + 222 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Good collection of short stories, very creepy, the one that sticks with me concerns clowns. I never did care for them, now I know why.
reviewed Nocturnes on + 149 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A collection of dark short stories from a master storyteller. I really enjoyed this book but I am a fan of Connolly's books. This leans to the horror genre so beware if you don't like horror.
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reviewed Nocturnes on + 636 more book reviews
This is a book of short stories, so I would think that the best way to respond would be to each one individually ... all 15 (though there is, apparently, a different version with more stories - how frustrating for me!):
"The Cancer Cowboy Rides" - This was a quite chilling and remarkably grotesque story about a living cancer, embodied in "Buddy". A truly disgusting story, it was certainly entertaining and a quite solid short story.
"Mr. Pettinger's Daemon" - A much shorter story, but no less eerie and very reminiscent of _The Descent_... this one would be good for expansion, as many questions to the nature of the Beast have gone unanswered. The most interesting tidbit was the reference to the cannibalism of WWI... I wonder if that bit is true.
"The Erlking" - An eerie short story that reminded me of _The Book of Lost Things_ more than anything else he's written so far. I thought I read somewhere that this one was going to be expanded into a screenplay, that I would certainly be interested in seeing! This one is the most fairy-tale-like so far.
"The New Daughter" - Yikes... this was by far the creepiest story... and the best so far as expansion into a movie, I think. This one is my favorite so far... so creepy!
"The Ritual of the Bones" - Ehhh... gross, but this one wasn't as darkly enchanting as the previous two. All in all, an average scary story.
"The Furnace Room" - An interesting twist of Hear-No-Evil, See-No-Evil and Speak-No-Evil, mixed with the Fates... fun and quick, but not terribly thought provoking.
"The Witches of Underbury" - The is was a very interesting short story and it would be interesting to learn if the actual witches in that town are based on a true story.
"The Inkpot Monkey" - A "cute" scary story, focusing on the "hazards" of writer's block. More funny and quaint than creepy, but still an enjoyable story.
"The Shifting of the Sands" - The problem with these short stories is that they are so... short. They are intriguing and do have a beginning, middle and usually a rather haunting open ending, but the would be better with more detail, stronger characters... in other words, length.
"Some Children Wander By Mistake" - A clown story - yikes! Though a pretty typical scary story and not too terribly unique.
"Deep, Dark Green" - Something about this short story reminded me of a poem... there was just something oddly poetic about it.
"Miss Froom, Vampire" - What a fun little vampire story! I just love a fun vampire story - who doesn't?
"Nocturne" - A more typical ghost story - still eerie, but not anything very remarkable.
"The Wakeford Abyss" - Spiders!!! Yuck! Also reminiscent of _The Descent_... I wonder if he has read that book...
"The Reflecting Eye" - I was surprised that this Charlie Parker story was included, though I did enjoy it and it did bridge some of the gaps around his daughter's birth. He is a very good writer, with a real talent for humourous dialogue, building suspense and inclusion of "normal" paranormal activity. The ending certainly surprised me, though some questions were left quite unanswered.


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