Disturbing Book Review (Episode 1)

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  • čas přidán 10. 01. 2022
  • Tell me what other books I should review. I'm not asking I'm demanding.
    Up next will be the return of Dapper History, then Kitchen Princess part 3!
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    Monkeys Spinning Monkeys Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
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Komentáře • 285

  • @Tiptoe178
    @Tiptoe178 Před 2 lety +682

    You are not literate. Please do not lie to people on the internet

  • @stampede274
    @stampede274 Před 2 lety +741

    You have the exact energy of someone who just found a dead body in the woods and is waaaay too excited to tell me every single disgusting detail except where you found it. (complementary)

  • @brightyell0wgun
    @brightyell0wgun Před 4 měsíci +253

    "I hate the mindset that liking a piece of media means that you have to like the subject matter" THANK YOU!!! I wish more people felt that way!!!

  • @naruli
    @naruli Před 2 lety +385

    Discourse over an author not being the same sexuality as their characters is dumb. As long as the writer knew what they were doing and not just being homophobic for 100 pages; let people write characters that are diverse dammit!!

    • @ChrisLeeW00
      @ChrisLeeW00 Před 2 lety +89

      Stephen King consulted his wife a lot while writing Carrie. Open dialogue with someone who has lived the life of your character is key!

    • @rosemary3029
      @rosemary3029 Před 2 měsíci +8

      Any relationship can be abusive no matter the sexuality

    • @darlingfordeer
      @darlingfordeer Před 27 dny +4

      I think people were mainly upset about the fact he didn't do any research into the different forms of gay reproduction and just assumed stuff.

  • @Ignitus541
    @Ignitus541 Před 3 měsíci +150

    I think the worst thing about “Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke” is the fact that the idea of something like giving someone absolute control over something like your bank account and willingly doing whatever they want or else you’re fucked should be absolutely terrifying, but none of those aspects of the relationship actually come into play. And the entire payoff of the setup to the story is a tapeworm.

  • @jamie1602
    @jamie1602 Před 2 lety +126

    One of my favorite books is Catcher in the Rye. I know it's the favorite book of serial killers and school shooters but it's a beautiful book about a teenage boy who is spiraling and desperately needs help after something traumatic happens in his life. It's a screwed up book. I sat there reading it as a teenager and realized that before I got on medication to help balance my pain which was making me depressed, I had Holden's thoughts. It was upsetting. But it felt like someone understood me and understood that like Holden, I needed help. Holden's narration is unreliable and I can't trust how he sees it but in his state of mind, that's his personal truth and how he sees it due to depression, anxiety, and various other problems he's suffering under.
    That doesn't mean I'm going to go "ugh the world sucks" and do something violent. I do find that the world tends to hurt the most vulnerable first but we can also do things to help them when we pay attention and offer kindness.
    Enjoying "dark" subjects isn't a horrible thing. When we decide to write/consume things irresponsibly and ignore there are very real people who have to endure these things and go through them, we're not being great people. We're trying to pretend that bad things are "imaginary" and they can't happen to us. It's like I try to remind people about "fairy tales". They have quite a lot of truth in them. Children won't magically come to life from bones in the fireplace but children were murdered for inheritance money or due to their families starving... and it's not make believe. Evil "step parents" were less step and more parent. Bad things exist and will find us the second we pretend we're safe. Don't pretend that depression can't get you; it will and it has you on speed dial. Don't pretend that these horrible things can't happen. They might be rare but your chances are never zero. And sometimes reading them is the way to cope. To have a fantasy is sometimes to indulge for a moment... Because again, rare does not mean impossible.
    For those of us who have suffered terrible things, it becomes a disservice to those who do the "head in the ground" purity culture. What we went through was very real. I'd rather a writer get it right than insist it never happened. I am real. These subjects are real.
    Rare... but not impossible.

    • @DarlingMissDarling
      @DarlingMissDarling Před 16 dny

      Whoa.
      "Don't pretend that depression can't get you; it will and it has you on speed dial." 🤯
      Babe, you're so real for this and goddamn I'd love to put that line on a shitty mug. I'd cherish that mf 😂

  • @cairn4838
    @cairn4838 Před 2 lety +225

    For anyone interested in stuff that talks more about media literacy, I highly recommend Lolita Podcast! It talks about Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita super comprehensively, including diving into why bad faith interpretations of it are so popular, the history of its many adaptations and how they relate to abuse prevalent in Hollywood and Broadway and news media, while still leaving space for understandable criticism of both the novel and its author. Lolita is one of my favorite novels and I think talking about it opens the door for frank and necessary conversations about abuse and the inherent value of children’s lives.

  • @lolyoutoobe
    @lolyoutoobe Před 2 lety +92

    THANK YOU it's so annoying when people just say a book is disturbing but don't explain how.

  • @BacchusDiem
    @BacchusDiem Před 2 lety +219

    i appreciate you picking relatively lesser known titles! i feel like most people go for the classics like the wasp factory, 120 days of sodom, etc... i'm excited to see what other Fricked Up books people suggest in the comments

    • @mikeoxlong4556
      @mikeoxlong4556 Před 2 lety +9

      Ngl I kinda enjoyed the wasp factory except the obvious animal stuff.

    • @julesdapper5584
      @julesdapper5584  Před 2 lety +23

      of course! I hope to bring attention to newer books & authors with this series. You really miss so many gems if you're not looking for them.

  • @DarkestBowser
    @DarkestBowser Před 2 měsíci +10

    I’m a crime scene and biohazard cleaner. I love my job intensely. My family thinks it’s the most disgusting, awful thing and never ever wanna hear about any of it. Other people wanna hear it all. Contrary to popular belief, I don’t LIKE the subject matter of sewerslide and moider and gore. I love the physical labor, the constant monitoring of my surroundings and emotions, being around hardcore situations, helping people through an awful time, and intensive white glove cleaning.
    I love your description of being able to love a type of media and not enjoy the subject matter. I’ve never been able to describe why I like seeing and hearing about horrific stories, art, and media, but still being disgusted and needing to cover my eyes at times lol

    • @ZeroChan
      @ZeroChan Před 14 dny +2

      Genuinely, thank you so much for your service. My partner had to clean his brother’s apartment HIMSELF after that brother had been dead for at least a week. The labor that you do helps to shield people who are already deep in their grief from some of the most visceral and distressing parts of life. Thank you so much for offering that comfort to grieving families.

  • @elderflower2133
    @elderflower2133 Před 2 lety +278

    As someone whose favourite play is Medea, I completely get how annoying it is for other people to think that liking a piece of media means you endorse the content. I don't think it's cool to murder your children :/

    • @julesdapper5584
      @julesdapper5584  Před 2 lety +102

      I personally do think it's cool to murder your own children, but I get where you're coming from.

    • @elderflower2133
      @elderflower2133 Před 2 lety +36

      @@julesdapper5584 you and medea would vibe so hard

    • @TheMenasaur
      @TheMenasaur Před 2 lety +17

      Look if my husband cheated on me with a younger woman after forcing me to murder my brother and then also kill the children of his enemies??? i might have also gotten the zoomies

    • @nursemain3174
      @nursemain3174 Před rokem

      I love madea it’s very feminist

    • @shutup3790
      @shutup3790 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Word, killing kids is NOT cool man 😭🙏🚫❌🆒

  • @sleepysmartboy6287
    @sleepysmartboy6287 Před 2 lety +66

    Zoe's fantasy sounds a lot like me in my toxic phase as like 16 when my boyfriend called me "Daddy" in front of his parents 😭 it was awful for both of us we were toxic and I'm so glad I left him and found a therapist. But it seems like a story I can relate to.

  • @elderflower2133
    @elderflower2133 Před 2 lety +72

    Omg thank you for this, I was very intrigued by the cover and title of _"Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke,"_ but couldn't actually learn anything from the reviews I read. And now I know that *drumroll* I'm probably not gonna read it because based off your review it might not be worth it. This is gonna be a deadly series!!!

  • @HB600
    @HB600 Před 2 lety +48

    There's a book called The Radium Girls by Kate Moore. It's a work of nonfiction, but I think it could work for this series.

  • @sernoddicusthegallant6986
    @sernoddicusthegallant6986 Před 11 měsíci +6

    The protagonist of Dead Inside should have been a woman - that way the title could have been a terrible dad joke.

  • @zachzackzak
    @zachzackzak Před 2 lety +29

    I really appreciated your bit on the liking books with "suspect" topics -- I cannot stand people who freak out or demonize someone who likes books that explore topics like that. Lolita is one of my favorite books and it does not mean that I condone what happens in it lol.

  • @tinysalmon4
    @tinysalmon4 Před 2 lety +46

    One of my favorite books I read last year was Dennis Cooper's The Sluts (2004). Definitely disturbing, but a really beautifully written and fascinating rabbit hole into the world of sexual extremism, the power of anonymity, the problems of idolization, and an examination of the personas we form and the roles we perform both in real life and online.

  • @qweenofhertz
    @qweenofhertz Před 2 lety +39

    I love this series of reading disturbing books! I can't wait to see more episodes and see what you find! You should definitely read a book called "Found." by Todd Rigney! It's only 136 pages, it's a very short but intriguing read that I highly recommend! It's a really interesting and disturbing book about a 10 year old protagonist who loves horror movies who finds out his older brother is a serial killer who keeps heads in his closet. The story has really good characters and development with an absolutely bat-shit ending! I think you might really like it!

    • @julesdapper5584
      @julesdapper5584  Před 2 lety +4

      new book reviews coming soon! I'll add "Found" to my list, thank you!

  • @annicat648
    @annicat648 Před 2 lety +28

    Love seeing in depth horror reviews that go beyond "wow, that was weird". I would love to hear what you think about Sheridan Le Fanu's Carmilla, or even some of his other novellas from In a Glass Darkly. I particularly liked the writing and themes in Carmilla (and also lesbian vampires), and I would be interested to hear your thoughts.

  • @sleepysmartboy6287
    @sleepysmartboy6287 Před 2 lety +33

    Major tw but a personal connection to Dead Inside;
    As a victim of CSA with multiple offenders the dialogue often reminds me of the different kinds of offenders there are and their thoughts etc. I guess it makes sense since pedophilia and necrophilia are both paraphilias and seen in similar ways.
    But I've met the ones who are determined that their desire to cause harm is 'just another sexuality there's so may of [them]' (gross). The ones who have decided to dedicate their entire lives to hiding that they're predators and this don't have families, high up careers, etc.
    I've been around apologetic offenders who say they're sorry and they'll never do anything bad again. The ones who want to protect their jobs and families and cry and say they wish they could help me (but never did).
    I've witnessed an argument about how it's 'too far' or how they 'may as well embrace who [they] are' and the similarities I've seen in the books dialogue has always been hair raising.

  • @maliceaverill9007
    @maliceaverill9007 Před 2 lety +13

    I have seen "Things Have Gotten Worse.." suggested occasionally on reddit and have been a bit curious about it. I appreciate you taking the time to actually review the book as opposed to just saying that it "was very jarring" and "greatly disturbed you".

  • @OBecs
    @OBecs Před 2 lety +23

    THANK YOU FOR HAVING THE SAME REACTION TO THIS BOOK AS ME. I was wtf-ing all over the place and it wasn't about the creepy stuff.

  • @geminified
    @geminified Před 3 měsíci +5

    I wish i had more friends like you. you're so well reflected and add interesting conversation to books/topics i love hearing about and getting your input. irl i don't share my hobbies anymore bc it's so taxing to deal with the dying art of media literacy and spoon feeding morality 101.
    thank you for making these videos, they make me feel so much less alone.

    • @maddieb.4282
      @maddieb.4282 Před měsícem

      Someone who thinks they’re smarter and better than everyone else around them is a red flag! Just fyi

  • @OMFGZdance
    @OMFGZdance Před 2 lety +30

    OK, so it's not as disturbing as the ones you talk about here, but I really highly recommend The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones. Holy shit Jules, it's brutal and beautiful-- there's an elk-headed woman and she is intent on revenge. Also Jones' book My Heart is a Chainsaw, which is about a slasher fanatic and her use of her incredible knowledge of horror film stories to navigate what seems to be a "slasher cycle" starting in her home town. She finds a final girl and tries to help build her up to beat the slasher, but she's still trying to figure out who or what the slasher will be while the supposed final girl sees her as a girl who needs to be rescued. I was just all over the place while reading it-- equal parts "I see myself here and I hate it" and "wait what the heck is this actually happening"
    OK I love you bye bye

  • @saint5943
    @saint5943 Před 2 lety +13

    i absolutely love disturbing books and i love seeing you talk about lesser known books! i'm excited to see more of this series

    • @julesdapper5584
      @julesdapper5584  Před 2 lety +6

      Yeah! I plan on making this series focused around smaller, lesser known titles rather than the famous disturbing ones (like American Psycho, Lolita etc). I'd love to work with some indie authors and give their work some support

  • @Vivi-Bel
    @Vivi-Bel Před 28 dny +1

    This was such a refreshing review on Things Have Gotten Worse. I read it myself and was so disappointed that other reviewers only wanted to focus on the taboo aspects of the story and how disturbing it was. I really respect and appreciate your voice on this. I love how you focus on actual literary elements relevant to the quality of the work. You are the reviewer I've been looking for! 🖤

  • @eponymouselias
    @eponymouselias Před 2 měsíci +1

    I literally lost a friend because I said I thought it was okay to write or read about incest sometimes and stories that involve incest can be interesting. It’s so refreshing to find people who can understand that consuming media about dark topics doesn’t mean you condone that behavior or want to “normalize” the fucked up stuff you read about.

  • @Zanyotaku
    @Zanyotaku Před 9 měsíci +5

    I love problematique media, taboo can at times bring out strong emotions and if an author can bring strong ideas to the table alongside that, the impact can be quite profound. Some of my favorite works I have a weird “I hate the subject matter so much but I really enjoy how it was presented and I love the ideas it wants to play with.” love/hate relationship with some media. Especially things like horror and eroge (adult visual novels) sure, a lot of horror and ero is shock and shlock but sometimes they bury a nugget of something really intriguing in these things.
    Anyways yea, thanks for giving these a fair shake, dead inside sounds interesting.

  • @marygoodrich4
    @marygoodrich4 Před 2 lety +17

    The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter is a great collection of rewritten fairy tales with darker storylines, I recommend

  • @BananaGeekLord
    @BananaGeekLord Před 10 měsíci +2

    I just had CZcams recomend this video. I've seen countless videos about disturbing horror, including those two. But I'm honestly kind of glad to see someone actually talking about them. Like if anything this video could have been twice as long, and I feel like I would have loved it. Especially since, as you said, the majority of the videos just talk about it being disturbing. They just mention a few gory moments. For some, that's all it needs. Like Woom, while a great book, isn't exactly all that deep. It's just a lot of shock factor. But then I hear people actually discuss books like Dead Inside, and I think it's great. Also the brief rant about how liking these things in the books is different from liking them in real life.
    Over all I'm sold and gonna watch more videos.
    Also, I haven't read Dead Inside yet(I only really discovered extreme horror maybe a year ago), but agree with all the points on Things Have Only Gotten Worse. Over all great book. Loved everything about it. But it needed to be a bit longer and build up more. Some of the jumps were a bit of a hindrance to the shock value.

  • @emilymobleylove
    @emilymobleylove Před 2 lety +5

    I absolutely love your content and having someone as interested in these things as I am with actual intelligence who can break down topics like this! You’re awesome keep being you!

  • @cloverleaf7925
    @cloverleaf7925 Před 2 lety +6

    Loving this series already! And thank you so much for saying that just because you like something, doesn't mean that you condone the actions lol. It's such a basic thing but a lot of people don't get how someone can like something that has something in it that they disagree with. I love pretty much anything disturbing and it's sad that I can never talk about those things because it's seen as taboo. Looking forward to future videos!

  • @ievav.1927
    @ievav.1927 Před 2 lety +3

    Your videos are so refreshing it’s amazing! Can't wait for more

  • @Connoble
    @Connoble Před 2 lety +9

    Omg your plant(pothos?) has grown so beautifully!! What a good plant parent, damn

  • @srlily2996
    @srlily2996 Před 2 lety

    thank you for making this video, it was really interesting (as always)
    i found out about the first book through tiktok and the reviews were pretty much useless, and the ones that actually "talked" about the writting just said it was bad, no explanation no examples.
    i'm looking forward to episode 2 :)

  • @bossuhole
    @bossuhole Před 2 lety

    i feel like you'd absolutely LOVE the resurrectionist based on the books you read in this review + your previous content 👀👀

  • @juliemassam933
    @juliemassam933 Před 2 lety +1

    I loved this! Would be interested in hearing more.

  • @Jadedbunny8
    @Jadedbunny8 Před 2 lety

    Oh hell yeah I love this series already! I guess I would suggest Haunted or Wasp Factory.

  • @chey6241
    @chey6241 Před 2 lety

    okay you are actually hilarious and your views on these books is so good and refreshing!1

  • @meganmcguire7404
    @meganmcguire7404 Před 2 lety +2

    I’m so exhausted that I thought the lamp in the wall nook behind you looked like a face…

  • @nephthys2549
    @nephthys2549 Před 2 lety +2

    I just started reading the haunting of hill house, appreciate u giving me recommendations for when im done with it :)

  • @jacknsally18
    @jacknsally18 Před 2 lety +1

    You are a breath of fresh air, keep up the book talk.

  • @rageagainstmyhairline5574

    You might have rekindled my desire to read with this series, and if so, thank you :)
    I used to read a lot of horror, moved to literature, then philosophy, then lost my love for it. Can't wait for a few recommendations!
    Edit: Also, the rabbit joke was good. I snorted.

  • @maddy8188
    @maddy8188 Před 2 lety

    I loved your commentary over these books ^_^!! I'm currently reading Tender is the Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica, and it would be cool to see your take on it!

  • @maddieb.4282
    @maddieb.4282 Před měsícem +2

    “Portraying lesbians as abusive is negative towards the community!!! You can’t do that!!”
    Lesbians who have escaped abusive and toxic relationships and who want support: 👁️👄👁️

  • @l1feisstressful-dp7ze
    @l1feisstressful-dp7ze Před měsícem

    10:20 pardon??!! that's the most unhinged plot I've ever heard of

  • @grandpaix3992
    @grandpaix3992 Před 2 lety

    i have never been more glad to have found a channel.

  • @13MoonGold
    @13MoonGold Před 2 lety +2

    I completely agree with your discussion on taboo subject matter. I personally have a limit to what I can really stand, but more power to the people who are willing to talk about the stuff people like to push to the side.

  • @atticusdalton4129
    @atticusdalton4129 Před 2 lety +4

    I have so many recommendations omg. Cows by Matthew Stokoe, Off Season by Jack Ketchum, Pretty Girls by Karin Slaughter and Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk are all magnificent!

  • @electra12331
    @electra12331 Před rokem

    Actually just found you through this video. Didn't realize you made daisy brown, great job with your series. Thanks for the review, cute hair!

  • @MinatheRaichu
    @MinatheRaichu Před 2 lety

    Lmao, I fully expected you to just end the video at "Umm, the answer is-" and just never answer

  • @bloodLiddell666
    @bloodLiddell666 Před 19 dny +1

    I read this last night and felt very much the same way as you. I read it after Be My Friend by Mique Watson because it has a similar mixed media vibe, but way more disturbing

  • @elloisejohnsonn9312
    @elloisejohnsonn9312 Před 3 měsíci +1

    “I’m literate I swear” is basically how I go about my daily life at this point lol

  • @pidgeonmayhall1910
    @pidgeonmayhall1910 Před 22 dny

    I’m gonna be honest I really loved the titular story in “Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke” because as someone who has been in controlling relationships like that the fear comes from how quickly they can convince you to do horrible things. To me it made sense that the second task was so huge especially since it ended up being something that made the MC “feel powerful” because that illusion of empowerment is such an important part of that control. I also understood the random rabbit story and shit cause it’s so reminiscent of a controlling person trying to bond through trauma and be like “I’m too fucked up you should leave me” every five seconds. But also I get how the author could have eased someone else who hadn’t experienced something like that into the narrative. I feel if he had spent more time establishing the MCs mindset before she started seeing the other person it would have made a lot more sense but the cat log email thing didn’t really allow for that. Kinda funny I just recommended this book to my sibling right before seeing that you’d made a video on it 😅

  • @gaynutbuster
    @gaynutbuster Před 2 lety

    your videos are really good and you seem to make anything easy to listen and entertaining!! im also looking for books rn to read and i might pick up Dead Inside. ive also been eyeing on To Be Devoured by Sara Tantlinger and maybe you also wanna read it?

  • @K3nn_
    @K3nn_ Před 2 lety

    Havent started the video yet but I found ur channel yesterday bcz of ur Bubba Sawyer video and u are literally already my fav creator, u make the commentary and stuff ao enjoyable to listen to :') anyways hope u have a nice day/night

  • @Eve.v
    @Eve.v Před měsícem

    thank you for your review of dead inside !! so far it's the only of the books you've recommended that i have found in my library's e-book catalog. so i checked it out and finished it in the same evening! (it's actually the first book i've finished in Uhh A Long Time so thank you Double!)
    [ spoilers for DEAD INSIDE below ]
    i really enjoyed it!! i agree that the narrator's voice was gripping and often comedic just because of what a fuckin edgelord this guy is. some of my favorite moments were when he freaked out and got anxious about social interactions (specially him getting anxious standing in helen's house and thinking about being Perceived in the restaurant) because it enforces that he needs to perceive his strangeness as a strength because, in reality, it isn't. the single funniest line in the book for me was: "I have commenced small talk." just so indicative of his voice -- and the moments when he speaks to the audience, like, sir? To You, there is no audience. For You, no one is hearing or seeing or reading this. he's just.....like that, even (especially? only?) when there's no one there to observe him.
    i agree that the "twist" was predictable; when helen said "my.....i got someone to fix [the car]" i was like Ah, she's married. so when the guy shows up at the bar, i agree it's super easy to put two and two together.
    oh! i also really enjoyed the theme of addiction. you get to see how helen's addictions coalesce around and because of this one particular guy, culminating in the final scene of the book. there's this idea in the book that you should "die doing what you love," showcased primary through the girl the MC talks to as she's dying -- she seems, to the MC at least, at peace with, even happy with, her dying the way she did. but this is contrasted with helen, who, in my opinion, does not die doing what she loved, but because she needed to be loved and could not live with herself after what she knew "had" to be done. like she's high out of her mind, she's sobbing when she tells the narrator the baby is dead -- she doesn't even get the satisfaction of having sex with the MC while still alive. in a way, her death is death by overdose, like the "junkies" the paramedics talked about earlier on.
    also!! if you're still reading the comments on this vid, i have a question for ya!! (or if anyone else would like to share their opinion go ahead !) :
    do you think the narrator dies or goes to jail at the end of the book?

  • @WolfShadowwhisper
    @WolfShadowwhisper Před rokem +1

    I love books about taboo subject matter, it is interesting since I have been part of certain taboo cultures myself (no, nothing crazy like the characters in these books mentioned by Jules) but hint, I am an old school goth, as in real goth from the 80s not what millenials think is goth, that being said this review was dope and I plan to read both books. Great video, jules

  • @HavenGray
    @HavenGray Před 2 lety

    you never cease to amaze me

  • @monikabeachy778
    @monikabeachy778 Před 13 dny

    I’m drunk and the Dr Seuss stuff took me out of commission for like 30 minutes

  • @ChrisLeeW00
    @ChrisLeeW00 Před 2 lety

    The world needs a book about Daisy Brown, or any story from you. I’m begging you.

  • @finxeythemushroom6065
    @finxeythemushroom6065 Před 2 měsíci

    I have a recommendation! Penpal was pretty disturbing and distressing for me, of course not as much as these ones (I was able to read it with my mom relatively comfortably), but the build up still makes my stomach churn, and I’d still consider it very disturbing. I’d love to see you review it :]

  • @J.Nevermore
    @J.Nevermore Před 2 měsíci

    Late af cause it’s an old but love how u and Anda Kent describe books as a whole, horror genre or not 🫡🫡🫡

  • @Amethyst_Alien
    @Amethyst_Alien Před 2 lety

    Juuuuules! Need more of these reviews 💜🖤💚

  • @tangerinemisfit
    @tangerinemisfit Před rokem

    I like the cut of your jib. Subbed. I looked for both books in my local Waterstones…nada. Interwebs it is

  • @l1feisstressful-dp7ze
    @l1feisstressful-dp7ze Před měsícem

    1:36 KITTTTYYYYYY!!!! they kinda look like the stray I and my family have been feeding/taking care of but she's really skinny, I actually saw her for the first time in days this morning

  • @Vision-kn2yi
    @Vision-kn2yi Před měsícem +1

    Do you have panel from Uzumaki where Azami gets engulfed by a spiral from her forehead in front of Kirie and other on your jumper/sweater thing?

  • @Eternalbliss702
    @Eternalbliss702 Před 2 lety

    I'm reading whatever you post about lol I'm obsessed

  • @sanitycaycay2507
    @sanitycaycay2507 Před 2 lety

    I know you were asking for scary books, but once you're in the mood to make another Dapper History, I suggest looking into the serial killer Leonarda Cianciulli. Very weird and disturbing story. (Also I feel like you could make a cooking princess joke out of it because you're a very talented writer.)
    Many regards.

  • @yelena86
    @yelena86 Před rokem

    I didn’t watch your Daisy Brown series when it was released. How and where can I catch it in 2022? Does anybody know please and Thank you 👍✌️🙏❤️✨

  • @em_kit
    @em_kit Před 11 měsíci

    hiii can you review full brutal? i saw you did gone to see the river man, im planning on reading that tirana book next, but full brutal was my first of his and i loved it! thank you!

  • @vicc5176
    @vicc5176 Před 2 lety +1

    "You're never gonna see the final makeup look" - Top ten anime betrayals

  • @sleepysmartboy6287
    @sleepysmartboy6287 Před 2 lety +2

    One classic book that is disturbing by design - to show you the horrors of racism and generational trauma as well as how it's dealt with I'm African American communities - is 'The Bluest Eye' by Toni Morrison.
    Warnings are; racism, dysfunctional families, abusive families (especially parents), bullying, physical assault, sexual assault and rape of both adult and child characters and miscarriage.
    It's the story of three little girls, all black growing up in the 70s as well as their families. Pecola Breedlove, an 11 year old and her family's dysfunction is a huge plot point.

  • @LucasBuilds
    @LucasBuilds Před 2 lety +1

    Ooh, any plans for anything by Thomas Ligotti in this series? The weird 'is he a real person or is this stephen king Doing a Bit Again' thing surrounding him is fun as heck and his actual work is some good creepy shit.

  • @mrblasto1729
    @mrblasto1729 Před 2 lety

    What do you think of David Wong/ Jason Pargin? He made the John Dies At The End Series?

  • @JarharaJaiArik
    @JarharaJaiArik Před 2 lety

    I'd be interested in seeing a review of "tarantual" (not the one with the giant spider) I kinda zapped into the movie but it was a little much for me, but now i am morbidly curios about the book

  • @grrrrosey
    @grrrrosey Před 2 lety +1

    Jules please review 'the tulip touch' by anne fine!! it's a british children/ya book that i read when i was around 10 and then again and again until now that chronicles the friendship of two young girls. it seriously is haunting and dark and it rocks

  • @lizabee
    @lizabee Před 2 lety

    "oh hey I've never heard of that movie I wonder what scene got cut!"

  • @thetrashcollector853
    @thetrashcollector853 Před 2 měsíci

    This is the second vid of yours i’ve watched and this is also the second time i’ve had to stop watching and go read the book you’re talking about. U should be getting paid!!! 😂 thanku for recommending Gone To See The Riverman and I’m about to start Dead Inside now!

  • @krackkokichi
    @krackkokichi Před 2 měsíci

    for a hot second i thought the eyelash curler was a monocle lmao

  • @SoIveBeenToad
    @SoIveBeenToad Před 2 lety +1

    Damn that chit chat with Auny Julia is really feeding the parasocial relationship

  • @Connoble
    @Connoble Před 2 lety +1

    The Painted Bird by Jerzy Kosiński is my vote/recommendation. When we had our holocaust units in 6th grade my dad gave me this book to read alongside of the required reading. He said something about "people focused on Hitler, but everybody was a monster waiting for an excuse." I'll just copy a summary/blurb: "1939, a six-year-old boy is sent-by his anti-Nazi parents to a remote village in Poland where they believe he will be safe. Things happen, however, and the boy is left to roam the Polish countryside, trying to stay alive, looking for food, shelter, and a principle of Justice to accomodate what he sees people do to each other and to him. To the blond, blue-eyed peasants in his part of the country, the swarthy, darkeyed boy who speaks the dialect of the educated class is either Jew, gypsy, vampire, or devil. They fear him and they fear what the Germans will do to them if he is found among them, So he must keep moving. In doing so over a period of years, he observes every Conceivable variation on the theme of horror, sadism, and bestiatity. A cockold miller gouges out the eyes of a ploughboy with the back of a spoon. He loses his voice in a pile of human excrement, almost freezes to death underneath-a frozen lake, and is 'hung by his Wrists atop a vicious dog..." " The novel proper, without tidying-up, is purely and simply a panoply of horror, expertly wrought and disgusting. There is no more parable or symbolism here than there was at Buchenwald. Jerzy is a brilliant writer, but let the reader beware. It's very hard to take."

  • @lunajacobsen2140
    @lunajacobsen2140 Před rokem +1

    I really appreciate this series, as an enjoyer of disturbing fiction I rarely get to have discussions about what I read and this kinda fills that void. I just finished Exquisite Corpse by Poppy Z Brite and I really recommend it, whilst it is disturbing it's also very tender and sweet, it's also extremely gay, like it's more about being gay than it is about being a necrophiliac.

  • @koharuchitzu7252
    @koharuchitzu7252 Před 3 měsíci

    From the Start i see Junji ito merch, i just know this video is gonna be fun

  • @Amethyst_Alien
    @Amethyst_Alien Před 2 lety

    Have you read Snuff by Chuck Palahniuk? More mainstream, yet taboo with interesting twists.

  • @ChrisLeeW00
    @ChrisLeeW00 Před 2 lety

    I bet there are a bunch of Junji Ito shirts on red bubble, that’s right up their alley.

  • @smallgoblin2594
    @smallgoblin2594 Před 2 lety +1

    Why do I recognize your voice and why am I subscribed to you My brain is hurting and blanking at the moment

  • @Nin5egAta
    @Nin5egAta Před 26 dny

    Love your energy! But what did my beutiful shizoboy JreG do?? 😭

  • @l1feisstressful-dp7ze
    @l1feisstressful-dp7ze Před měsícem

    40:44 so basically prophet from vintage eight's analog horror serries?

  • @Lili99911
    @Lili99911 Před 10 měsíci +1

    *sees intro* *immediately subscribes*

  • @CT-se8vn
    @CT-se8vn Před 3 měsíci +2

    Dead inside plagued my mind for weeks after I read it and I wouldn’t shut up about it. I still don’t tbh. 4/5 star lol

  • @ashfantastic3021
    @ashfantastic3021 Před 2 lety

    I just love your videos so much

  • @sparstangled
    @sparstangled Před 2 lety +2

    This Thing Between Us by Gus Moreno, on the shorter side, I don't think the official synopsis represents it super well. Just a relentless story about grief

  • @TheHolderOfTheStory
    @TheHolderOfTheStory Před 2 lety +2

    If you like manga you should read Feeding Lamb! It’s kinda like both books combined. A one sided gay relationship where one person takes advantage of the other and murders/cannibalizes people who get in the way.

  • @kael5707
    @kael5707 Před měsícem

    Pls pls review Mother Thing if you have the chance! Ik this video is old but I feel like you might possibly like the book- it’s not extremely disturbing? But the twist ending is really good in my opinion and idk I’ve just never read a book like it

  • @roberthutchinson5775
    @roberthutchinson5775 Před 2 lety

    I know you said books but what about the Leatherface versus Jason Voorhees comic books

  • @MercedesHawks
    @MercedesHawks Před měsícem

    Not sure if you are doing this series anymore, but the book "Exquisite Corpse" is remarkable and deserves good reviews other than the emphasis on cannibalism (that is a bizarre sentence lol)

  • @JustanOrdinaryTomatoKay

    Random, but thank you for including subtitles! 💕

  • @blueregardinkwood4875
    @blueregardinkwood4875 Před 12 dny

    I've been called transphobic for liking Silence of the Lambs. I am trans. I really appreciate you talking about how enjoying a certain type of media doesn't mean you support the subject matter. (Not to mention the text directly calls out people that hold transphobic views because of people like Buffalo Bill, but that's besides the point)

  • @kristycallaway5212
    @kristycallaway5212 Před 9 měsíci

    Have you reviewed Cows by Mathew Stoke?