Steve Feasey - Changeling Zombie Dawn Blog Tour - Favourite Horror Book and Movie

Changeling
                                           
It's the final curtain call for one of the best new horror series to be published for some time. It's been great following Trey and his adventures and in the final book we are in for a cracking read. So thanks to Steve for rushing this post over to me,I know how busy you are. I'm glad to see your still stealing books from family members,do they steal yours?


At events, I often get asked what are my favourite horror book and movie. I pretend to umm and ahh whilst knowing exactly which film had the greatest impact on me, and which book turned me onto horror from the usual feast of sci-fi and fantasy that I’d devoured as a youngster up until that point.


Alien is my favourite horror film. And it’s old – 1979! “But that’s ancient!” I hear you say. But in this instance, it’s a case of an oldie being a goody. In a time when there was no CGI to summon up an on-screen monster with, the monsters in horror movies of this time were all too often, well…lame. How many times was a great premise destroyed by bad make-up and costumes, leaving the audience unfulfilled and cheated? Far too many. If the guy in the latex suit looks like a guy in a latex suit, something is wrong. Alien was different. For starters, the monster was unique – no reconstituted horror tropes here, oh no. Not only unique, but you get THREE monsters for the price of one. Facehugger is the first incarnation of the Alien: the thing that adheres to John Hurt’s face and implants something into his stomach. When the Facehugger drops off, all seems well, but there’s much worse to come. The next embodiment of our monster is the most shocking, and provides the film with its most memorable moment, as Chestburster erupts from the still-living body of the unfortunate space traveller and whizzes off across the room, the audience squirms in its seats. The last incarnation of the monster is also brilliantly imagined, and the fact that it is only seen in glimpses (terrifying glimpses, yes) lends to the tension and fear that the film evokes in me, even now (and I’ve seen it countless times). I love the originality of Alien, and it still outranks almost every other horror movie for me.


My favourite horror book is not the best horror book I’ve ever read (and perhaps I’m stretching things a bit to describe it as my favourite), but it is the one I think had the most impact on me at a young age. I read it at the age of about twelve or thirteen, and it was the first ‘proper’ horror book I ever picked up. Carrie by Stephen King is about as far away from Alien as you could get. Set in an American high school, the book is written in an epistolary style, using diary entries, newspaper articles and interviews to explain how whole parts of the town and many of its inhabitants are eventually destroyed by the shy and bullied Carrie White, who uses her newly discovered telekinetic powers to wreak havoc on those that have made her life so miserable. I picked this book from my sister’s bedside cabinet, drawn to it by the gruesome cover of a girl with blood running down her face. I stole it and read it in secret in my room, and it scared the wits out of me. I have never been as scared as when I read that book in my room over the next two nights, and I realised that I quite liked the sensation. I was hooked and I’ve always enjoyed horror since. Although I read across a huge range of genres, I still dip in and out of horror when I need a ‘fear fix’.
So that’s it. My fave horror movie and book, and the reasons I love them so much. If you haven’t checked them out, do so. 


Next port of call is Friday at My Favourite Books so check it out.
And for more information on Steve and his books pop over to http://www.stevefeasey.com/

Comments

Carmen said…
1979? It doesn't look that old either!

I haven't started reading this series yet, does sound good - another to add to the ever expanding list.