
This 25-year-old horror novel captured the terrors of the internet
History is rarely kind to the horror genre. For every work that manages to worm its way into the cultural unconscious — for every 'Alien,' 'Exorcist' or 'Shining,' say — there are a heap of films and novels left to languish unseen or unread.
So, when a work of horror stands the test of time, it's worth pausing and paying attention. Released 25 years ago this month, Mark Z. Danielewski's novel 'House of Leaves' is as hauntingly alive today as it was when it first appeared. The novel's continued success is as improbable as it was inevitable. Improbable because 'House of Leaves' is no straightforward horror story. A work of excellent avant-garde pulp, Danielewski's book delights in metafictional experiments and odd typography. Inevitable because the horror it conveys is still with us. At the heart of 'House of Leaves' are the peculiar terrors and agonies of the internet age.

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Gizmodo
a day ago
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‘Sunshine' and ‘Event Horizon' Bring Deep-Space Madness to Gruesome Heights
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Since we don't really meet him before he's become a raving, solar-mangled mix of evangelist and Freddy Krueger, we can't say if his mind was in a good place before he headed into space. In Event Horizon, we get a meaty foreshadowing that Sam Neill's character, Dr. Weir, is dealing with PTSD following his wife's death by suicide—and we get a front-row seat to his complete unraveling. However, the biggest contrast between these self-mutilated monster men is perhaps their ultimate intentions. Dr. Weir's consciousness becomes entwined with the cursed ship he designed, and he's determined to drag the Lewis and Clarke crew to hell with him. That's entirely freaky, but Pinbacker's twisted motivation is possibly worse. He believes that the sun dying is part of God's plan to end humanity. He's also come to believe that God speaks directly to him, and that none of what God has set in motion should be challenged or altered. 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Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
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