Today, I read an article on Tor.com and it got my wife and me talking.
We started with which books were our gateway to reading regularly.
For her, the books she read were the Little House books, Anne of Green Gables, and The Secret Garden.
For myself, reading was different. There were books I felt I had to read to satisfy my father. Then there were other books.
The latter books were ones I wanted to read, and I did, though not in the living room where my father could see the covers.
This second group came from the school library or on my weekends with my mom. She never judged me for what I read. I believe one of the reasons I write horror and fantasy is because of the books she read.
I remember seeing my mom with horror books. Today, along with my wife, she’s the person I feel my books are written for.
When it came to the books my father had me read, it was always techno-thrillers like Tom Clancy, Dale Brown, and others. I was reading those books in sixth grade. I may not have understood all of the text, but I read them because it felt required of me.
The first time I read a book that I loved was The Indian in the Cupboard. It was one my mom bought for me. I read that book a few times. I didn’t enjoy the second book as much and by the time the third came out I was bored with the series.
After we discussed our early beginnings with reading, my wife and I talked about books by authors we don’t read anymore.
For me, it’s Anne Rice, for her it’s the Lisbeth Salander books.
The first time I remember seeing Anne Rice’s books was with my father. I showed him Interview with the Vampire, I was fourteen. He said, “No, you’re not getting that.” Then he handed me a techno-thriller. I read the techno-thriller but remembered the cover for Interview.
It was years later when the movie came out that I read that book. If I had read Interview at fourteen I may have turned out differently. I loved that book, though The Vampire Lestat is still my favorite. I can still quote sections of the book.
I fell out of love with Anne Rice when she started the new Lestat series a few years ago. I’m not sure why I did, but it no longer holds power with me as it once did.
I believe we outgrow books sometimes.
Sometimes it’s the authors themselves.
My wife and I agree on that point.
With my own kids, I used to push books on them. Now, I let them read what they enjoy. I know what feels like to have a certain genre thrust down your throat until you gag on it, it’s unpleasant.
Today, I read a lot in the horror genre, but in order to improve my writing, I’m reading more regular fiction.
If you follow me on GoodReads you’ll see what I’ve read this year. It’s diverse but not as much as it needs to be. I can’t help it, I like to be scared or unnerved by what I read.
I like the challenge of getting through books that terrify people.
When I write, I try to have my wife and mom in mind. I think what would terrify them. Then I do that.