Danza macabra

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Dan Simmons: Danza macabra (Italian language, 2009, Gargoyle)

945 pages

Italian language

Published Nov. 7, 2009 by Gargoyle.

ISBN:
978-88-89541-21-0
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OCLC Number:
800494365

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4 stars (25 reviews)

16 editions

Read Carrion Comfort

5 stars

Content warning Paragraphs 4 and 5 broadly mention things that happen in the book (but no specific details)

Review of "L'Echiquier du mal (L'intégrale)" on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

L’Échiquier du mal, un livre sur ma PAL depuis au moins…très longtemps ! Après Hypérion, je me devais de poursuivre ma découverte de l’œuvre polymorphe de Simmons. Avec ce roman, le lecteur en a pour son argent : thriller, espionnage, histoire, horreur, vampire, guerre, psychologie, tout y est.

Le vampirisme revisité par Simmons, ce n’est pas de la rigolade. L’auteur a opté pour le vampirisme psychique, plus sournois, plus vicieux, et paradoxalement plus propice aux scènes d’horreur. Le vampire de Simmons ne se salit pas les mains, il exerce son Talent avec distinction, et propage abominations, tragédies et autres affreusetés. Son manque absolu de compassion, d’empathie et d’humanité le rend aussi effrayant que fascinant. Il explore le psychisme de ses victimes avec une curiosité scientifique, et les transforme du même coup en êtres zombifiés dépourvus de volonté. N’ayant pas de limite morale, les méfaits de cette sale engeance sont retors, …

reviewed Carrion Comfort by Dan Simmons (Headline Feature)

Review of 'Carrion Comfort' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

A book that garners high praise from Stephen King (he calls it one of the three best horror novels of the 20th century) and Guillermo del Toro (calls it a true classic that will shatter your worldview) and the praise is well-deserved. Carrion Comfort twists the convention of vampire fiction, creating mind vampires that feast upon the thoughts and deaths of the their victims. The novel gets its title and epigraphs from Gerald Manley Hopkins' poem 'Carrion Comfort' and the main characters in the novel are, like the speaker in Hopkins' poem, trying avoid giving in to the carrion comfort of despair. Instead of giving in to the despair, violence, and horror around them, the heroes of the novel risk everything to seek out revenge in spectacular fashion. There's even an awesome Hitchcock moment halfway through the novel that prevents things from getting stale, which is always a risk in …

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