Showing posts with label Horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horror. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Supernatural Forces

We have another new display up on the first floor featuring books and DVDs on unexplained phenomenon, legendary creatures, alien abduction, and haunted locations. This was my favorite section of the library to browse as a kid, and you can find most of the books on these topics right at the beginning of Nonfiction at Dewey numbers 001 or 130.

You can also search the library catalog, using subject keyword terms like Parapsychology, Unidentified Flying Objects, or Haunted. You'll get the most results from the Contains... search option. You can narrow your results to just DVDs or Adult Nonfiction from here as well (unless you're looking for children's materials, then try j Nonfiction). Click on the image below to enlarge.

Image: SETI by Paulo Alegria, www.flickr.com/photos/paulgi/280789933

Monday, October 3, 2011

Happy Zomtober!

October is the perfect time of year to celebrate everyone's favorite undead monster: the zombie!* I learned of this celebration through the library grape vine, and you can read more about Zomtober and Zombie Fiction on this pathfinder created by an employee of the Rapid City Public Library. Beware! Catalog links will take you to Rapid City's catalog, and not Carnegie-Stout's, but these search terms will work right here in Dubuque!

Zombies and libraries are, of course, a great partnership, like peanut butter and jelly. Where better to find delicious brains than in an institution devoted to learning and literature? The zombie patrons of Charlotte Mecklenburg Library have created a website in support of their library (be sure to check out their videos).

University libraries have their own zombie infestations. This zombie comic guide to the library at McPherson College is particularly ambitious, and useful for Carnegie-Stout patrons too (McPherson uses Dewey). The University of Florida has put together a helpful survival guide in case of a zombie attack. In conclusion, I leave you with this video from the Allen County Public Library:



Be sure to check the blog and drop by the library to see our displays this October, as we highlight Carnegie-Stout's paranormal, supernatural, horror, and all topics designed to spook you.

*I suppose one could celebrate other undead fan favorites: vampire, mummy, poltergeist, or the wendigo.

Monday, September 26, 2011

"The Terror" by Dan Simmons

On May 19, 1845 the Franklin expedition set sail from Greenhithe, England on course to explore the Arctic coastal mainland and to map the elusive Northwest Passage. Two ships, the HMS Erebus and the HMS Terror, crewed by 128 men and commanded by Capitan Sir John Franklin, sailed without incident across the Atlantic, stopping briefly in western Greenland before making contact with the whaler Enterprise in Baffin Bay in late August 1845. That was the last time Franklin's expedition would be seen.

The mystery of what happened to the men of the Franklin expedition inspired numerous rescue and recovery expeditions during the late 1800s. A handful of scientific expeditions have also attempted to discover the fate of the Franklin expedition, the last in 2010. The doomed expedition has served as the subject for many works of fiction, film and art, all speculating on the ultimate fate of the Erebus and Terror.

Dan Simmons weaves both fact and fiction as he puts forth his own theory on the fate of the Franklin expedition in The Terror, a thrilling blend of horror, science fiction and historical fiction. Told from the perspective of several crew members, the narrative focuses on Franklin's second in command and captain of the Terror, Francis Crozier, and the aptly-named Henry Goodsir, assistant surgeon aboard the Erebus. Sir Franklin is portrayed here as an overconfident fool, haunted by the failure of his previous Arctic mission, where he became known as "The Man Who Ate His Boots." Crozier, a heavy drinker yet capable leader, is embittered from watching lesser men rise through the ranks of the Royal Navy while he is denied his own command due to his common Irish origins.


"Man Proposes God Disposes"
by Sir Edwin Henry Landseer,
via Wikimedia Commons.
Simmons takes great pains to accurately describe all the finer points of an 1800s Arctic expedition. At times, the level of detail drags the narrative down, although the reader can appreciate the effort to set the scene. Many of the details described - such the manner in which the canned food was prepared and the many different kinds of ice found in the Arctic - do play important roles in the events that follow.

Soon after the Franklin expedition enters the Arctic, the Erebus and later the Terror become entrapped in pack ice. The crew soon finds itself beset with disease, food shortages and the harsh Arctic environment where the temperatures rarely rise above 50 degrees below zero. Some men die of pneumonia or scurvy, others from botulism and lead poisoning caused by the improperly prepared food. More ominously, the crews of the Erebus and Terror soon find themselves stalked by the Thing - a ferocious polar bear-like creature, seemingly possessed of a murderous intelligence - that begins to pick off the crew in ones and twos and later scores more in very dramatic fashion. The horror elements of the novel are best found here, in both the malevolent nature of the Thing and the injuries it inflicts.

Simmons also borrows from established horror authors throughout the novel. One passage in particular, describing the events of Carnivale, a New Year's celebration held by the now ice-bound crew of the Erebus and Terror, skillfully alludes to Poe's The Masque of the Red Death. The crew carves several rooms and passages out of the ice surrounding their ships, each decorated by canvas dyed in bright colors and filled with men dressed in fabulous costumes. Much like the doomed guests of Prince Prospero, many of those in attendance at Carnivale also meet a gruesome end.

As in most horror novels, many of the threats faced by the crew are of their own making and, often times, are the men themselves. Sir Franklin disobeys orders by neglecting to leave message cairns along their route, which may have lead rescuers to the stranded ships. Allegations of mutiny and murder are brought as more men are killed and disfigured. When a mute Inuit woman and her mortally wounded male companion are discovered near the Terror, the situation becomes even more unstable.

Note found in a cairn on
King William Island in 1859,
detailing the fate of the Franklin
Expedition in two messages.
Via Wikimedia Commons.

Despite the hardships, the remaining crew clings to the hope of rescue. Nearly two years since the ship were first entrapped in the ice, the surviving crew decides to abandon ship and attempt to reach Back's River by foot, while the Thing continues to pursue them. Conditions worsen further, as does the crew. Madness, suicide and, perhaps inevitably, cannibalism soon follow.

The resolution of the novel, while surprising, is also somewhat uplifting. Villains meet their deserved end and our heroes either die nobly or live on. The ending also displays Simmons' predisposition for science fiction and the supernatural as we learn the true nature of the Thing.

I discovered this novel, as luck would have it, during the third season of Lost, and fans of the show will especially enjoy Simmons' menacing portrayal of the Thing and the bare-knuckle fight for survival. And, much as I found the ending of the TV series, I found The Terror's conclusion paled in comparison to the bulk of the preceding story. In subsequent readings, I've found myself skipping the end and instead relishing the rising tension, the grim choices made to ensure survival and the sometimes gruesome consequences of those choices. But in the darkest parts of the novel can also be found light, in the redemption of Capitan Crozier, the sacrifice of ship's steward Bridgens and the dogged determination of Dr. Goodsir. Fans of horror, historical fiction and suspense will relish this novel and it is best enjoyed on a dark winter's night (with a glass of orange juice to stave off scurvy close at hand).

~ Allison, Adult Services

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Books to read in October

Ah, October! A time for apples, pumpkins, and gorgeous foliage, but as Halloween approaches our thoughts turn to ghosts, witches, and zombies. We here at the library are collecting lists of materials to fit the Halloween spirit.

Are you a fan of graphic novels? Check out these
Halloween Horror Comics

Do you enjoy paranormal romance? We have a list of
Romance for Halloween

Trick, Treat, or Murder? Try your sleuthing skills with a
Halloween Mystery

What's better suited to Halloween than an outbreak of the living dead? We have a number of books that cover the potentials of a
Zombie Attack

Check out this post for updates, or watch for posts on our Facebook page!http://www.flickr.com/photos/boxercab/