shyam sapkota
Bio
Stories (53/0)
CITY OF ROSES
Many years ago, when I was 21 years old, I met a woman named Cleo. His style was a careful, selective mix, a curation now that I can only describe as a trans dyke that takes on more pain, but is still a dyke. She was wearing a long black hoodie with a red trunk and dots sewn with floss. Bright red lipstick and a nose ring large enough to injure a person. He had black hair and blue eyes.
By shyam sapkota3 years ago in Fiction
"A way to Horror Fiction"
Horror is a peculiar genre. If it’s meant purely to scare, then some of the heftier books on this list would have wracked up a body count, terrifying readers to death over 700 pages or more. And what is scary? What might shock one reader is laughable to another. Ghosts, serial killers, great heaving monsters, the loss of self-control, plagues, impossible physics and a creepy clown all figure into our countdown, with entries spanning from the 1800s to the last few years. One (obvious) author makes five(!) appearances, and easily could have qualified for a few more; another has written just one novel during his decades-long career. We narrowed our focus to prose novels, so please don’t ask after The Books of Blood or Uzumaki. And while we kept an eye on the diversity of our featured authors, the inclusion of women, authors of color and queer creators came naturally as we gathered the best of the best. We’re prepared for you to question our choices, we ask only that you leave the chainsaw at home before doing so. Without further ado, we present our choices for the best horror novels of all time.
By shyam sapkota3 years ago in Horror