Richard Laymon is awful and you should all be ashamed of yourselves..(o)(o)

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 345

  • @lilgit9969
    @lilgit9969 Před 2 lety +41

    I loved reading the Richard Laymon novels on my kindle back when I used to work nights by myself in a gas station..one night we had a power cut and I was in the middle of a Laymon book, I forget which one but I was jumpy for the rest of the night having thoughts about people creeping into the gas station...when a friend of mine showed up at 4am and I was still jumpy I hadn't seen him enter the store so I literally screamed as I turned around and there stood this hulking 6ft 4 Icelandic Hells Angel with long hair....kindest soul you could meet but my word did my heart nearly stop. We had a good laugh about it afterwards but I'll never forget how terrified I was.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +4

      😂😂 that does sound like an alarming experience! Glad you got over it and it didn’t take away your love for horror

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +5

      @@citycrusher9308 hold on… the Handmaid’s Tale is a feminist work about male oppression. Laymon’s books are cheesy horror thrillers that get off on descriptions of T&A and stalking. The two things couldn’t be more different. Like I literally can’t think of two things that touch on male/female relationships that are more different.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +2

      @@citycrusher9308 why do you spell women with 2 vs instead of a w?

    • @user-ng9gd4vl9s
      @user-ng9gd4vl9s Před rokem

      The 6ft Nordic biker sounds like a character in his books who'd be a temporary hero/saviour before the killer/monster takes him out.

    • @salomonschabrowsky7218
      @salomonschabrowsky7218 Před 10 měsíci +1

      As a german I was laughing out loud about the statement about the phonetic similarity between the german word Insel and the english abbreviation Incel which condenses to a revealing and fitting description of Rupert and with that Laymons obvious sexism.

  • @johnsmith8906
    @johnsmith8906 Před 2 lety +34

    I was trying to describe Laymon's books to someone recently...best I could come up with was: Remember those movies you used to get in video shops back in the day with lurid gory and pornographic covers? Imagine that, but books.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +7

      😂😂😂 that’s pretty perfect

    • @BenKellyMusic92
      @BenKellyMusic92 Před 2 lety +3

      Agreed 😎👍

    • @user-ng9gd4vl9s
      @user-ng9gd4vl9s Před rokem

      Sanitised version.

    • @nicholasjones3207
      @nicholasjones3207 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Stephen King without a conscience is the tagline that’s stuck for me. I’ve read a few now and it looks like his mid career stuff is what I like. The earlier titles I read have been a bit of a mess. Enjoying bite currently and it’s an enjoyable read.

  • @user-dx1jb4zq9e
    @user-dx1jb4zq9e Před 11 měsíci +11

    Are we sure the woman being stalked trope is misogyny though? The final girl is the hero, not the villain. You could just as easily interpret the psycho stalker as a manifestation of male self loathing, which I suspect is closer to the truth. As for Laymon, In the Dark is a good one. Somebody actually made a low budget movie adaptation of it shot on some lofi consumer camera. It's actually pretty good and has a way better ending than Laymon's book. It's on CZcams

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 11 měsíci +3

      I totally agree that it doesn't have to be misogynist, but (for me at least) Laymon often makes it feel like it is. I'll have to check out that movie!

  • @Bloody-Butterfly
    @Bloody-Butterfly Před rokem +39

    Richard Laymon books are depraved! He is my favorite author!

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      Ha! They really are

    • @jayrobb1862
      @jayrobb1862 Před 6 měsíci

      This dude has a stick planted firmly up his ass about "sexual details". 🤭🤭🤭

    • @RaySmiley
      @RaySmiley Před 5 měsíci +1

      Same!

  • @timshields8720
    @timshields8720 Před 2 měsíci +3

    As a teenage boy I LOVED Island. Need to read it again as a 40yr old.

    • @sco467
      @sco467 Před měsícem

      I'm a similar age and I read it again a few months ago.... Just as good 👍🏼

  • @Sgtvenom4598
    @Sgtvenom4598 Před měsícem +3

    Laymon is one of my favorite horror authors ever. He gives people what they want and doesn’t over complicate things. If you’re triggered by him you shouldn’t be reading horror anyway.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před měsícem

      That suggests quite a narrow view of the genre

  • @vintagehorrorlibrary
    @vintagehorrorlibrary Před 2 lety +22

    In my opinion, Laymon is good when you don’t binge read him (like I did). I had to put Flesh away for a while since I am so sick of reading only Laymon. Now, I notice how similar his books are and they types of phrases he uses and to me, it gets a bit tiring. But overall, Laymon is a pretty good author. Especially if you’re horny 😂😂😂

  • @BlackacreDoe
    @BlackacreDoe Před rokem +17

    Maybe I'm a creep lol, but he's becoming one of my favorite authors. I don't have much to go on, I've only read Night in the Lonesome October and am making my way through The Cellar, but I still don't know if I've had as much fun with a book in the "splatterpunk" realm than with what I've read so far by him. Juan and I swapped some books and he gave me both Savage and Island, so I'm curious to dig into those soon.

    • @Bloody-Butterfly
      @Bloody-Butterfly Před rokem +5

      I love him. I’ve read over 20 of his books and most of them are great

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +2

      I do think The Cellar is pretty great - he just keeps pushing and pushing with it. The problem with him (and to be fair with many writers) is that he's uneven (some great books, some awful ones) and his own personal obsessions often take over his books and end up dominating them. I love Savage and hate Island so will be interesting to hear what you think of them

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +2

      I agree that when he's good, he's a lot of fun!

    • @asaprabbit8305
      @asaprabbit8305 Před rokem +1

      Savage is pretty good, it has a bit more depth to it than his other stuff

  • @svenr7251
    @svenr7251 Před 11 měsíci +2

    It’s basically just 70’s , 80’s slasher/horror. If someone gets offended I guess they’ve not seen many horror movies. Gore and teen sex is part of the parcel. They would freak out reading American Psycho, now that’s descriptive

  • @BenKellyMusic92
    @BenKellyMusic92 Před 2 lety +14

    I'm not in the least bit ashamed about my fandom of Richard Laymon. I barely read a word of any books from between the ages of 9-14, and King and Koontz did absolutely nothing for me.
    But Laymon provided horror with absolute VISCERA 🔪👹 And thus, my reading motivation returned with a vengeance, and trained my resolve for the likes of more advanced horror fiction. For that, I'll always be indebted to him.
    Not all of his books were good, though. Allhallows Eve was my least favourite one 🙄

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +3

      Any writer who motivates a reader like he did you is a treasure! For all my (hopefully fairly good natured) criticism of Laymon, I do have a fondness for him, cheesy as his books can be.

    • @Infamous41
      @Infamous41 Před 2 lety

      King is the greatest horror writer

    • @Infamous41
      @Infamous41 Před 2 lety +2

      @@CriminOllyBlog aren't most horror books cheesy especially if written in the 80s

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      @@Infamous41 Many are, but not all by any means. And I think Laymon takes it to another level 😂

    • @BenKellyMusic92
      @BenKellyMusic92 Před rokem

      ​@1st responder I couldn't disagree more with that statement, respectfully. Jack Ketchum is my candidate for the best horror writer of all time 😈

  • @sco467
    @sco467 Před měsícem +2

    I absolutely LOVE Laymon... Switch off my brain and away we go..
    "Out are the Lights" was the first book i ever read as a 15 year old...
    Im now mid 40s and re-reading a lot of his work and i still love it haha..
    Just a fun fun ride...

  • @ericr8048
    @ericr8048 Před rokem +4

    I have long held the opinion that Laymon wrote, to some extent at least, like a 14-year-old boy (albeit a talented one). He was frequently fixated on sex in his books, often to the point of derailing the story in places and his characters are wacko, often quickly descending into depravity at the slightest push, but most frequently just not acting like anybody I have ever met. I remember reading a message board years ago and someone (who was a professional writer, although I don't remember who, but he was a primarily small press horror writer) posted about Laymon and mentioned that Laymon had the most realistic characters he had ever read. That left me wondering what Laymon novels he'd read because those were certainly not any that I have read. As an example, in his novel Body Rides, the main character comes home to his girlfriend and tells her that he has been having sex with the woman he brought home with him. Her reaction is to then have sex with him and then all three of them get it on.
    All criticisms aside, Laymon was a fun writer. A Laymon novel from time-to-time is enjoyable, but reading a few in a row will tend to become one giant blur of weird homicidal guys and people who do things that people in real life just would not do.

  • @michaelk.vaughan8617
    @michaelk.vaughan8617 Před 2 lety +6

    This video isn’t even available to watch yet and already it’s the best video of the month.

  • @Headlounge2097
    @Headlounge2097 Před 2 lety +11

    After reading the title of this video, I was prepared for a very shame inducing kind of video. I’m so glad, that it turned out to be a very interesting opinion on Laymons books. I have to agree on almost every point you laid out. I couldn’t even finish the island (Die Insel). However, every once in a while I take one of his books from my shelf and have a good time with it. Even though I have a problem with most of his characters, their motives and their questionable behaviour ( especially towards women).

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks for watching! I think some commenters just read the (admittedly inflammatory) title and then waded in to tell me I was wrong. I've actually (re)read a couple more of his books since filming this and thoroughly enjoyed them. I stand by my assessment that he is awful, but he's also great

    • @PunkRockLifer
      @PunkRockLifer Před 2 lety +1

      Island has one of the best twist endings ever so you missed out

    • @DocBree13
      @DocBree13 Před rokem

      @@PunkRockLifer interesting - now I’m torn as to whether or not to subject myself to the book. So there’s a different twist other than the one he talked about?

    • @razz5558
      @razz5558 Před 7 měsíci

      Ha. It's important to be awful in art sometimes. It's important to say " I am a criminal. I am not a decent human being that wants to be a part of civilization. I dream dreams of sexual and violent atrocity. " I started with James Herbert and followed the path to Jim Thompson, Richard Laymon and Jack Ketchum, etcetera. So many pervert writers. So little time.@@CriminOllyBlog

  • @johnnythepillpopper1974
    @johnnythepillpopper1974 Před rokem +18

    His best book is The Traveling Vampire Show, probably because it’s so much different to everything else he wrote.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +5

      I have a copy of that one somewhere, can't remember if it's one I read back in my teens or not

    • @asaprabbit8305
      @asaprabbit8305 Před rokem +6

      It is his best book indeed

    • @davidp4864
      @davidp4864 Před 11 dny +1

      I just started this a few days ago. Loving it.

  • @adobe4578
    @adobe4578 Před rokem +4

    I've only read The Cellar and it was fucked up.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      Ha! Yeah it really is. I reread it recently and I’d forgotten quite how far it goes

  • @bluecraig99
    @bluecraig99 Před 2 lety +8

    I have read the 4 Beast House books and I thought they are quite good in terms of being completely (weirdly) different to almost all other things I’ve read. Not of any particular high quality at all, but interesting enough none the less. And I thought the thread and characters running through the books was satisfying, if not particularly clever. Tried following those up with The Travelling Vampire Show which has stalled, I just can’t seem to stay interested. So not sure what I’ve learned about Laymon. Maybe the beast house books just held my attention at the time of reading, the right book at the right time.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +3

      I think there is something about the right book at the right time with everything we read. I also think Laymon is quite hit and miss, so maybe you just got lucky!

    • @ItcamefromtheVorrh
      @ItcamefromtheVorrh Před 5 měsíci

      Read the first Beast House book and really enjoyed it

  • @FrankJMarr
    @FrankJMarr Před rokem +5

    He is very detailed with his character's movements. He really wanted to put the reader into his stories, like a trailing shadow.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      That's a good observation - yes he's very voyeuristic

  • @PlaguedbyVisions
    @PlaguedbyVisions Před 2 lety +9

    I’m speaking only from having read two of his books, neither of which are infamous for being his worst, but still contained plenty of his… trademarks: I did notice he tends to include the interiority of his main characters quite a lot, and that interiority is quite imbued in dodgy politics (lots of strange, intrusive, and irrelevant thoughts on gun control, women’s rights, and sl*t shaming), so he is definitely a strange character in that regard. I have found, however, that there’s plenty of female readers who have in a sense “reclaimed” his work and read it with amusement and intrigue as a way of maybe disarming the horrid politics going on underneath the surface. I believe that is a great power that readers hold. Lydia from Typical Books left a really eye-opening and fascinating comment on my video, where she explained that even in such skewed and stereotyped femininity as the one in his books and the burlesque nature of its exaggeration, there is something that she as a woman can recognize herself in, and such characters are a nice fold to the usual “strong female hero,” and I think it’s the same with us male readers when we read about hard-bodied, chauvinistic killing machines, for example.
    Anyway, we have devoted perhaps more time to Laymon than he merits 😂 but he really is a fascinating subject, so I guess his writing may be worth it if only just for that. That being said, I’ll probably never read Island now, so thank you. 🙏🏽

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +4

      Does that two include The Halloween Mouse?
      That's really interesting about female reader reclaiming his work. I love the idea of disadvantaged or underrepresented groups taking control of the narrative in mainstream media and shaping it into something that works for them. I guess in any media the consumer is just as important as the creator and has their own part to play in the meaning of the work.

    • @PlaguedbyVisions
      @PlaguedbyVisions Před 2 lety +1

      @@CriminOllyBlog Shit! You’re right! 😂 3 then! The Halloween Mouse is truly his masterpiece.

  • @unstopitable
    @unstopitable Před rokem +2

    I can't stand Laymon. But I also can't stand being told what I can and can't read (or write).

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      Good job I didn’t do that then

    • @unstopitable
      @unstopitable Před rokem +1

      @@CriminOllyBlog Your video was very thoughtful. Sorry I came off so harsh. I'm still suffering from recurrent Laymonitis.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      @@unstopitable no worries 😊

  • @cindyarmenta8825
    @cindyarmenta8825 Před rokem +5

    My first Layman book I read was Island hooked ever since. Although, I usually read one a month of his books. I will read The Traveling Vampire Show next 👍

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      Cool! Glad you enjoy his books - I'm going to be reading more soon!

    • @paulread7113
      @paulread7113 Před 18 dny

      Travelling vampire show is one of my favourite novels by any author. Brilliant coming of ages novel.

  • @indecipherable22
    @indecipherable22 Před 2 lety +3

    I think you made some great criticisms of Laymon’s books, and put in perspective the odd fixations of his characters. (and perhaps him, but I try not to analyse people I’ve never met)
    I’ve read Darkness Tell Us, Body Rides, Cuts, and Island. Darkness… was incredibly difficult to put down and very pulp-ish - probably my favorite. Body Rides was a prime example of his rambling, but the concept was excellent and would be a great idea for a movie.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you! I do wonder if part of his rambling is because publishers inflicted page count demands on him so he ended up having to pad his books out to make them long enough.

  • @ladyowl8732
    @ladyowl8732 Před rokem +10

    The little speech about breasts gave me "disappointed dad finds his sons grubby magazine stash" vibes.😆😆😆. As a woman who grew up reading horror/ sci fi, I'm probably a bit desensitized to the misogyny in its different forms of writing, I just sort of roll my eyes and keep reading. There are some I gave up on😆😆

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      Yeah it was so very prevalent back then I think it was easier just not to worry about it

    • @paulread7113
      @paulread7113 Před 18 dny

      @@ladyowl8732 Not sure why a dad would be disappointed as pretty much all lads have a porn magazine at some point.

  • @stevenlockey8507
    @stevenlockey8507 Před měsícem

    Just found your channel and really enjoy your reviews and commentary. I loved Richard Laymon as a teen in the early 2000s. I also remember his books being very prominent in Waterstones. I remember particularly enjoying A Night in the Lonesome October. I didn't realise it was one of his last books, but it did seem a little, dare I say, more mature than some of his schlock. It certainly had some of his most well-developed characters, from what I can recall.
    He'll always have a place in my heart, if nothing else because his is probably the largest collection of physical books I had when I lived at my parents', and before I shifted to reading pretty much everything on Kindle. I'd be interested to revisit some of his work over 20 years after I last read it , but at the same time I don't want to risk ruining the good memories I have of it.

  • @badgerclan17
    @badgerclan17 Před 21 dnem

    I became a horror fan in my 20s. Throughout the '80s and '90s it was VERY hard to find horror that was actually good! Laymon's work is typical of the time, i.e. lurid, unpleasant and awfully written. I think modern horror is a vast improvement.

  • @paullennon7541
    @paullennon7541 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I'm currently reading and struggling with Endless night... I'm pretty sure I would have thought it was great when I was 14. Hard work at 46. I'll finish it though

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yeah I first read a lot of them as a teenager and they were great 😂

  • @darrylsloan
    @darrylsloan Před 2 lety +2

    I read "The Traveling Vampire Show" recently. First Laymon read in a very long time. I should have trusted my memory. But this one won the Bram Stoker Award in the year of its release. But what a tedious, boring book, with all the action confined to a short section at the end. The teenage characters were fun, and the horniness of the main character was relatable, even endearing (as a middle-aged man who remembers what it felt like to be fifteen) - except Laymon insists on endlessly repeating the same lust-filled inner dialogue, over and over and over, throughout the book. We get it, Laymon, he's horny: anything in a skirt gets him going. You don't have to keep hammering it home. It gets old fast. Never again.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah I do think Laymon might have been better if he’d had a more ruthless editor. There is good stuff in there, it just gets buried in crap.

    • @dornravlin
      @dornravlin Před 2 lety

      @@CriminOllyBlog That's really fare it does have a lot of crap but I like the characters. And I never had an ending give me that much anxiety not even Stephen King got my blood pressure going

    • @loosegoose2466
      @loosegoose2466 Před 2 lety

      Agree. This is one of his worst books. I think people who like Stand By Me like it for tne nostalgia. So many people love it

  • @ghostlyreads666
    @ghostlyreads666 Před rokem +7

    i just found this video and you are so spot on with this. i won't lie i consider him a guilty pleasure author, because his characters and points INFURIATE ME every time, but they are just So Damn Readable. they are so good for distraction, because i get so annoyed at the book that i can't be annoyed by anything else going on in my life.
    anyway, i had to comment because of that german title. after getting through my first book of his "into the fire" my first thought was "this man writes books exclusively for incels".

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      Thank you! I'm glad you get it (especially as I get lots of negative comments on this video!). You're right, he's really trashy but compelling and fun as well

  • @chriscornelious8393
    @chriscornelious8393 Před rokem +16

    Richard Laymon is like the patron saint of the subreddit r/menwritingwomen.

  • @buyahhhhrooo4418
    @buyahhhhrooo4418 Před 2 lety +2

    I just rewatched this video because I finished Island this week. I totally get why you view the book and Laymon's work in the way you do. Now that I'm finished with this particular book, I must say that the ending actually helped justify everything else that takes place.
    So, Rupert is clearly a repressed incel type and it seems we're supposed to be rooting for him the entire time. Laymon writes him as if he does just enough good that it's okay he has some terrible character flaws, and maybe we can hope that he will grow out of them one day.
    The end confirms that there is a true darkness to him and that he is a very deeply held misogynist. It's funny because he's so honest through the story and Rupert makes it seem like that makes him a decent person, despite his many flawed thoughts and feelings. He's so honest that he even writes in how he has kept these women caged up by the end. He has justified it in his own eyes. So, of course he wants us to think he's a good person, but we know by that last admittance that the red flags he displays throughout really are a sign of just how dark he can be. I didn't view it as Laymon justifying his actions, rather it seemed even Laymon thought of Rupert as a bad guy.
    I could be wrong. I have the disadvantage of only having read two books of his now, and the other was pretty mild in its creepiness compared to this (The Woods are Dark). Maybe after I read more I'll change my mind, but I had such a blast with this book and I couldn't help but laugh at how ridiculous Rupert was. I never liked him, but I definitely felt justified in that feeling by the end. -Brandon

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      Hey Brandon - that's a really fascinating take on Rupert and looking back I think you're probably right. I think my problem with Island is that it's so long and so that message gets diluted. In a 250 page book it might have worked better. I definitely think Laymon's shorter books are more successful on the whole.

    • @buyahhhhrooo4418
      @buyahhhhrooo4418 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CriminOllyBlog that makes sense too. I did like how quick The Woods are Dark was, it didn't meander and waste time with pointless red herrings like Island did.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      @@buyahhhhrooo4418 I think like a lot of authors his books got more bloated as he went on

  • @wheeljack0
    @wheeljack0 Před rokem +4

    I know there are better writers but he is my favorite. Reading all his stuff in order again.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      He's definitely fun!

    • @wheeljack0
      @wheeljack0 Před rokem +1

      @@CriminOllyBlog looking forward to watching more of your videos to get into some new authors

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      @@wheeljack0 Fantastic - hope you find some more that you like

  • @grimreads
    @grimreads Před 2 lety +4

    Richard Laymon is awful and this is why we love his books. I call his books "feelgood extreme horror" and this is a strange niche that he covers a lot better.
    I discovered him while in the UK in 2010, where horror shelves on bookshops were King, James and Laymon, then got all of his books I could buy over time.
    His books are horny, simplistic, tropey and I don't agree with his politics. To me his books read like everything a conservative family man fears the most and it is an interesting dive into his headspace
    Some of his books are also downright bad. Funland was the first book of his I have read and made me a fan.
    But he had a nice ear for dialoguethat make his characters interesting and the B-movie quality of his works that scratches an itch in many horror book fans and, when you read a lot of the Nasties from UK in the 80s you see that there are far worse authors in that lot than Laymon (Mark Ronson comes immediately to my mind).
    PS: Also, mentioning Gor (which I have not read) there is a trending series of books right now called "ice planet barbarians" which is somewhat similar and quite popular with women today so whatever rocks people's boats.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      There are certainly worse authors 😂
      The fact that Laymon had such a long career is proof he was doing something right. I do agree there’s something strangely appealing about his books, even when they’re awful.
      I’ve heard about those Ice Planet Barbarian books, maybe I should read one and do a comparison between them and the Gor books

    • @alien777
      @alien777 Před rokem

      That has do be a men thing, becouse there is nothing do feel good about his books, it Made me angree. There is much better out there, that is not sexist and unrealistic.

  • @TheAtlanteanArchive
    @TheAtlanteanArchive Před rokem +1

    I read three of Laymon's books back in the day: The Stake, The Traveling Vampire Show, and The Island. I agree with your assessment of him: easy reads, interesting ideas at times (The Stake was a great idea), but absolutely obsessed with sexualizing everything.
    The Island was too much for me, and I think was the last Laymon book I read. I felt like I was reading torture porn, but I wanted to know how it ended. When I finished it, I closed the book and thought, "What is wrong with this guy?" LOL.

  • @odothedoll2738
    @odothedoll2738 Před rokem +2

    My CZcams homepage put this and a video with a title in Japanese and a thumbnail of 2 anime girls making out right next to each other. I feel like the algorithm is psychoanalyzing me and I don’t like it.

  • @pedromoliveira658
    @pedromoliveira658 Před 2 lety +2

    When I first read Laymon I hated it. The Woods Are Dark is not a good place to start with Laymon. I gave him another shot and 3 years later I've read all his novels. There's 5 things I look for in a book. Characters, Fun, Ideas, Story and Style. If you fail in one of these that's okay, but if you hit all it's almost great. And going by these 5 things... Laymon kills, man.
    His books are fun and with great ideas (The Stake has a great premise, One Rainy Night, Night On A Lonesome October, Funland...). His style is simple but well thought out (he uses few well placed words to make his sentences declarative and at the same time provide the information needed for the reader to get what the character is either feeling, thinking out, seeing, smelling...) and makes for a quick read. His characters are generic but they serve the story.
    In the word of pulp horror no one does it better than Laymon.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      I have to say I read Allhallows Eve recently and I did enjoy that a lot more than Funland and Island which I'd read just before I made this video

    • @pedromoliveira658
      @pedromoliveira658 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CriminOllyBlog Funland has a goofy ending but again the idea, the characters and the style makes it very interesting to me. Boleta Bay is an awesome location, characters like Cowboy and the girl with the banjo are among Laymon's most memorable and the style is again very simple but thought out. At first I did not understand why writers kept mentioning Laymon and then I got it. Take Ray Garton for exemple. I read a few of his books and enjoyed him. He has the sex and the violence to go along with Laymon, but his style kept bothering me. Way too much exposition and telling. Laymon shows what's going on. And he does it with declarative sentences and well placed adjectives.
      Island is a fan favorite but I don't really like it. Laymon had a few good first person books like Lonesome October and The Travelling Vampire Show, but After Midnight and Island are not that good.
      Allhallows Eve is fun but I don't remember much about it. I think Laymon took a while but his best stuff is later 80s, early 90s. Starting with Funland or maybe a little earlier with Flesh. He had however a great run with the sequence Funland, The Stake, One Rainy Night and Darkness, Tell Us and then starting with Endless Night, Savage and In The Dark.

  • @Michael_Wertenberg
    @Michael_Wertenberg Před 8 měsíci

    I've only read his first book, The Cellar. I'm baffled it was ever published. His writing is sloppy, the story telling is lazy, and he's gleefully cruel towards women and children. I won't be reading any more from him.

  • @jackheslop2367
    @jackheslop2367 Před 2 lety +3

    I like some of Laymon's work though I prefer the short stories to the novels. To me, he's like a '30s pulp writer trapped in an '80s slasher writer's career. When he sets about writing simple, pulpy tales of private detectives, domestic murders, and Tales of the Unexpected-esque material, he can be very good. He's a magazine-y writer. Not up to much in the way of characterisation or style, but good with a plot twist.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      I don’t think I’ve read any of his short stories, but I think that your characterisation of him as a pulp writer is spot on.

    • @jackheslop2367
      @jackheslop2367 Před 2 lety +2

      @@CriminOllyBlog If you feel so inclined, try Dreadful Tales. It's my favourite book by him. Also Fiends, which collects a few of his early crime stories published in the '70s and '80s.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      @@jackheslop2367 thank you! I’ll look out for those

  • @dancolon47
    @dancolon47 Před 2 lety +2

    I live in the U.S. and I discovered him after he died ... I read a lot of his books in my early 20s and then kind of moved on to other authors. Regarding the sex ... I think he understood his target audience and the lurid material they wanted to buy. His books seemed to have followed the successful formula of Horror films of the 70s and 80s ... Lots of Blood and Lots of Sex.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      I think that's a very fair comment and the commercial drive probably played a big part in shaping his books. That said, I think he was into it himself at least a bit - I doubt his themes would have been as consistent and heartfelt otherwise.

  • @loosegoose2466
    @loosegoose2466 Před 2 lety +4

    Great video. Cant disagree with your criticisms. I went through a big Laymon phase about 15 years ago. I cannot put one of his books down when I start reading them (with the exception of Funland and Travelling Vampire Show). They hook you in, there's always a cliff hanger at the end of each chapter and you have to keep progressing. They helped me forget about my life when I was going through a very rough patch in a job where I was encountering a lot of bullying and harassment, which is ironic when you think about it. That being said the content is highly disturbing and you wonder why you read it and what the author was thinking. Mind you I've felt that about Game of Thrones aswell. Laymon actually has alot of female fans on the online boards, which shouldn't be a surprise if you see how many women queue up for the Shades of Grey novels. Some of his ideas are great. In the Dark was a compelling suspenseful mystery thriller that had the worst ending that looked like he rushed it out. Body Rides is a great concept as is Night in the lonesome October. I agree with you about the demonisation of the homeless, which even 15 years ago disturbed me.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you. I think escapism is really important and agree that there isn't always much rhyme or reason to it. What matters is that the books take us out of ourselves for a while. It is something I struggle with myself a lot, as many of the books I enjoy are pretty awful in many ways.

    • @etamommy
      @etamommy Před rokem +1

      Night in Lonesome October along with Traveling Vampire Show were my favorites of his. Interesting that you loved the former but couldn't get into the latter. To me they are both excellent. His books are disturbing and they surely have their sexist misogynistic threads that were, as Olly points out kind of a sign of the times but his plots are I think often quite interesting/engaging and he often has 2 or 3 interwoven in his books, and you are not disappointed to move from one to the other because they all hold your interest.

    • @kjwonka
      @kjwonka Před rokem +1

      I actually really liked Funland… not positive why.

  • @kevinsbookcase59
    @kevinsbookcase59 Před rokem +5

    I really got into Laymon back in 2015. Along with him, I was reading Brian Keene. Followed by Edward Lee. Loved your perspective about Richard 😊

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      Thank you! Keene and Lee were never as big over here as he was, but I’m starting to pick up their books now.

    • @island_girl
      @island_girl Před rokem

      Hi! I've been wanting to read Keene for over 10 years but was never able to do so (long story short, life intervened). I am now able to start reading again and downloaded a bunch of previews for his books on my Kindle but the problem is, I like them all and don't know which one to chose!
      I have always been between Dark Hollow and Castaways. Any suggestions?

    • @kevinsbookcase59
      @kevinsbookcase59 Před rokem

      @@island_girl in my opinion...both those titles are good...but out of those two..."Castaway"

    • @JamesQ-zp4wo
      @JamesQ-zp4wo Před rokem

      There's a squirrel that lives in my roof and he's like twice the size of a regular squirrel, (like the Vin Diesel of squirrels) so I've named him Bighead. As in: 'The Bighead' by Ed Lee. Love his books, Keene as well. I'm currently on 'The Darkness On The Edge Of Town' and it's probably going in my top 10 reads of all time. Highly recommend it.

    • @garycox9341
      @garycox9341 Před 7 měsíci

      Jack Ketchum, RIP.

  • @user-ng9gd4vl9s
    @user-ng9gd4vl9s Před rokem

    Quake was a banger. What people are capable of when circumstances change. Horrible, awful stuff it seems if Laymon writes it. But you believe it.

  • @InternetConnected
    @InternetConnected Před 11 měsíci +1

    I've read 2 of his novels. Come out Tonight features what is arguably the dumbest female protagonist in the history of fiction.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 11 měsíci

      LOL if anyone was going to win that award it would be Laymon

  • @IngaNoniFayJeth
    @IngaNoniFayJeth Před rokem +1

    This may be extremely petty of me, but I find the overuse of the word “rump” in all his works offputting and distracting.

  • @scottjonathon4878
    @scottjonathon4878 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi all. I want to read all of Laymon's published works but am falling short with a lot of his fastback books. They appear to either be unavailable or only at exorbitant prices. I would greatly appreciate a fan pointing me in the right direction!

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      I wasn’t even aware of those, but I just looked them up and agree they do seem to be crazily pricey. Other people may have better suggestions, but my tactic with things like that is to set up saved eBay searches covering all the possible bases and be patient.

  • @jqpublic3104
    @jqpublic3104 Před 2 lety +1

    The start of savage was (from memory) great, but the final few acts on the island were absolutely awful.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      Oh I quite like it all the way through. It’s weird how it seems to change genre at times, but I still think it’s a fun book

  • @paulflint6254
    @paulflint6254 Před rokem +1

    I used to read Laymon, not my cup of tea now. Bentley Little is much better, I have all his novels The Consultant is my favourite one. Forgot how bad Laymon was.

  • @debprescott751
    @debprescott751 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Awesome video! I agree with you about Laymon. I went through a phase about 15 years ago and read his books one after another. Then I stopped and just last week I started re-reading The Travelling Vampire Show which is my favorite. My second favorite is The Midnight Tour which I plan to re-read as well. I don't know if this mean a repeat of 15 years ago, but luckily I hung on to all the Richard Laymon books that I had purchased. Cheers!

  • @interghost
    @interghost Před rokem +3

    That was pretty spot on. Ive only just started reading his books and they are very much like b-movie or 70s porn/horror in book form. - I do agree that there is far too much r*pe in these books, but again, like you, they are kind of enjoyable and just enough crazy, too make you want to read another one. Definately a guilty pleasure author I feel.
    Side note - Ive watched interviews with him and he does come across very odd!

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      Thank you - I might have to look up those interviews!

  • @user-ng9gd4vl9s
    @user-ng9gd4vl9s Před rokem

    Island, classic murder mystery unfolding with the under dog surviving with horrific things happening weighting up against his own desires. A lot to unlock there. ....

  • @johnwalsh4857
    @johnwalsh4857 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Yes I do remember his books being very visible in book stores in the 80s and 90s, my first encounter with his books is in a Manila book stores in the mid 80s only one title (I forget which one) , then saw more of his books in HOng Kong book shops and even in the airport book stores. (found the UK edition books to be much better in presentation than teh US editions). and in US bookstores. Then his books disappeared form the bookshelves by the late 90s.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Yeah those Steve Crisp covers in the UK were really great

  • @johnnythepillpopper1974
    @johnnythepillpopper1974 Před rokem +2

    I agree, I have read many RLaymon books and I believe the sex is forced on the reader. Most of it is really not important to the story.

  • @user-ng9gd4vl9s
    @user-ng9gd4vl9s Před rokem

    I consider Glory Bus his best. He actually developed characters beyond "hero bad ass" "vulnerable heroin" "rape demon villain". Island, beast house trilogy, endless night, funhouse, body rides were all unique. But Glory Bus came from nowhere and left me hoping for a Boots & Duke spin off! And then he passed away.

  • @awakeenlighten2298
    @awakeenlighten2298 Před rokem +7

    I was writing short horror stories many years ago and Laymon was an influence on me. Personally, many may not like his books, but I enjoy them. Wink, wink, wink :)

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +3

      They're certainly fun when you're in the right mood. There's no one quite like him LOL

  • @jazzym.4973
    @jazzym.4973 Před 7 měsíci

    Ive only read one book of Richard Laymon’s and I was a teenager. I quite enjoyed it and finished it in one night. Years later I never understood why people hated his writing but maybe I didnt because his book was an introduction to Horror genre for me and now its all I read lol. I am interested in reading more of his books with my adult eyes just to see what maybe some others are so upset about.

  • @NOopulence
    @NOopulence Před 2 lety +2

    When I was younger (late teens early 20's if i remember correctly) I read almost every Laymon book I could find at the library within a period of a year or something like that. I remember enjoying them at the time for being reliably entertaining trashy junk foodesque horror novels with lots of over the top violence. Though out of the ones I read I don't remember which I enjoyed most.
    Recently I've wondered about how I'd feel about these books now if I revisited them. I'm not super well versed in his brand of horror and he was a bit of an outlier amongst the Stephen King, Dean Koontz, and Clive Barker stuff I read in my earlier years. The only other author I've read that I'd say compares to Laymon in style is maybe Brian Mcnaughton.
    But now I'm exploring more 'splatterpunk' style horror and would like to see how he compares to other writers within this style of trashy and crude fiction.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      I agree he's definitely an outlier in that he's unapologetically trashy and fun in a way that the other authors mention aren't. He definitely falls into that splatterpunk tradition, but I think he's also a bit different from other authors in that area because he's deeply uncool.
      Interested to see what you make of him when you revisit his work!

    • @NOopulence
      @NOopulence Před 2 lety +1

      @@CriminOllyBlog I think from memory the first novel of his that I read was 'funland' on recommendation from a friend if I recall. I'm going to revisit that one first.
      As a funny side note. I remember my local library (I grew up in a small Australian country town) having more laymon novels than any other horror author I looked for at the time bar stephen king lol In hindsight that strikes me as odd

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      @@NOopulence he was really popular in the UK as well in the late 80s/early 90s. In fact I read somewhere that he was much more popular abroad than he was in the US.

  • @wburris2007
    @wburris2007 Před 2 lety +1

    I can skip Laymon, since I have never read any and don't have any. Gor is a different story. I read the first 8 in the late 70s, early 80s, and accumulated 25 of them. I enjoyed reading them back then and am not sure why I stopped reading them. Probably because I found more hard SF to read and never got back to the Gor books. I enjoyed Edgar Rice Burroughs in the early 70s, when my choices were limited to what I could find in the school library. I moved to the city in 76 and started visiting bookstores. A school friend who moved to the city at the same time, told me about the Gor books, and I started spending my student loan on paperbacks from the science fiction section of the bookstores that I was visiting. Gor books felt like more of the adventure that I loved in the Edgar Rice Burroughs books.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah, it’s that fantasy adventure side that I really enjoy about the books. They’re just great escapist fun, full of action and colour. Thanks for watching!

  • @olinpaul
    @olinpaul Před rokem +1

    I took Dark Mountain and one of his short story books on holiday to read recently. I've had these books years and thought I'd re-read them. I don;t usually part with books but I left both of them in our apartment for someone else to 'enjoy' as I found them to be pretty cringeworthy reading all these years later.

  • @crispyblindead2413
    @crispyblindead2413 Před 7 měsíci

    Everything about Richard Laymon book experiences I have had can be summed up as: rape. Genuine scares? No, but we have rape. Morbid gore? No, morbid rape. Suspense? No, you already know they get raped. Hideous monstrosities? Yeah, and they mainly rape. Dark atmosphere? Not really, most of his books take place in California, and then rape happens. I don’t enjoy rape in any media so I’m not exactly a fan, it’s a truly despicable act and that should go without even saying it. But rape is horrific, so his place as a horror writer is genuine. I consider myself an avid horror fan, so I gave Laymon more than a few chances with his books. Not my cup of tea, but I don’t judge his fans. People experience horror differently, I engross myself in the atmospheric aspects. Some people revel in the revolting details. More power to them.

  • @edwardcreighton2638
    @edwardcreighton2638 Před 2 měsíci

    Read Funland, really liked it as a younger man. After that Laymon's books seemed very formalic for me, not revisited Laymon in many years.

  • @bikstokninja
    @bikstokninja Před 9 měsíci +2

    Is it the character that is misogynistic, or is it the writer? or does both bother you? im genuinely curious. sorry for bad english.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 9 měsíci +1

      The writer. I don’t necessarily have an issue with misogynistic characters

  • @sunwukong8498
    @sunwukong8498 Před rokem +1

    I read The Cellar when I was 16. My parents messed up.

  • @CDubya.82
    @CDubya.82 Před rokem +3

    Just read my first Laymon book. I enjoyed "The Woods are Dark". Not high art i know. I think of it as a great trashy B grade horror with a smattering of sex.

  • @ABFrank.
    @ABFrank. Před 2 lety +1

    I've heard about you and your 100 books challenge from Michael K. Vaughan and I should have hopped over much earlier than now! Michael said that my review of Laymons Midnight’s Lair is one of his favourite reviews ever 😄 it's the only Laymon book I've read and it was terrible. Before I read it I had bought a kindle copy of another of his books and just afterwards I received a 3rd of his books so I might read more of him. And when you mentioned Savage I thought I might give that a go because the 19th century is my favourite thing, Dracula etc. Laymon used to work for a law firm and has other credentials that suggest he should be better than the account he gives of himself in his books

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      Michael does like complaining about the challenge, which apparently I "forced" him to take part in. I'll have to check out your Midnight's Lair review. I find Laymon an interesting writer in that as bad as he is, his books have a definite entertainment value.

  • @DavidThomas-gd1xg
    @DavidThomas-gd1xg Před 2 měsíci +1

    His books would be better if they weren't so rapey

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Hard to argue with that

    • @DavidThomas-gd1xg
      @DavidThomas-gd1xg Před 2 měsíci

      @@CriminOllyBlog to be honest, that's the only thing that puts me off. Every woman is overly sexualized. Sure I love women and boobs.. but I don't feel the need to talk about them all the time. And it would be nice if he were to create an antagonist whose central motivation wasn't just to get his rocks off. Other than that! I think his books can be fast paced fun for people that like to read without delving deep into characters past and not particularly worried about a character arch. With one or two exceptions

  • @johnnythepillpopper1974
    @johnnythepillpopper1974 Před rokem +1

    The Island is somewhat related to the Beast house books (The Cellar, Beast House, etc)

  • @Mr.Shartly
    @Mr.Shartly Před 11 měsíci

    Last year an ice storm took out the power lines in my area, so I was without electricity for a few days. I was bored out of my mind after 12 hrs without technology. My ex had left a box of books, so I grabbed one off the top and started reading it. It was Night in the Lonesome October. I have to say I thought it was pretty good. I can picture it being a really good movie with the right director.

  • @edbredin6406
    @edbredin6406 Před rokem +3

    Excellent review. I read Richard about 15 or so years back. I was tired of King and Koontz so I went back to him a few months back. Some of his books 📚 aren't great but some are a brilliant read like Savage. Night in the lonesome October to name a few. I still have 20 or so of his books 📚 to read cos I think he wrote 35. My local library is helping me cos I live in Dublin Ireland and can't buy them anywhere. And don't read the cellar cos even i was pretty offended with some of the writing in that

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      Thanks Ed. Agree that the Cellar goes to some very messed up places!

    • @dianevanderlinden3480
      @dianevanderlinden3480 Před rokem +2

      Love Night in the Lonesome October.

    • @edbredin6406
      @edbredin6406 Před rokem

      @@dianevanderlinden3480 I thought the exact same. Reviews I've watched people don't rate it at all. But it's in Laymon top 5 book 📙

  • @kernowarty
    @kernowarty Před rokem +1

    Just finished listening to the audiobook of The woods are dark, having never read or heard his books before. The man seems obsessed with sex. It is ridiculous how the protagonists are all as horny as hell even though they are being pursued by insane cannibals. Sex would be the last thing on their mind in that situation. It is ridiculous. He is no Stephen King.

  • @j.a.flynn-author
    @j.a.flynn-author Před 2 lety +2

    Normally I like horror, gross horror even. However, I really am not a fan of his writing. Just his prose and his characters are a bit shallow. The way he describes anatomy is boring I think. The way he writes human emotion isn't great. Like I feel his characters are bland. Emotion is such a huge part of reading horror and I felt bored. Good video, sir. You summed up most of my thoughts.
    PS- Your accent is really cool :)

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      Yeah I know what you mean, it all just feels a bit too superficial

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      And lol re my accent - I don't really think about it tbh :D

  • @thenewmodfather
    @thenewmodfather Před 4 měsíci

    Laymon is my favourite author and I read his books quite often

  • @christopherrichardson2945

    MST3K did a Gore movie

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah I need to see that! I think there are two of them

    • @malachidrake7777
      @malachidrake7777 Před rokem

      Didn't MST3K do both? Loved them too, very fun, Oliver Reed was in one I think?

    • @christopherrichardson2945
      @christopherrichardson2945 Před rokem

      @@malachidrake7777 they probably did - only one was fresh in my memory - I’m sure you’re right

    • @malachidrake7777
      @malachidrake7777 Před rokem +1

      @@christopherrichardson2945 the good old days of MST3K!!!

  • @denisadellinger4543
    @denisadellinger4543 Před rokem +1

    In America, we have freedom of speech and of the press. Many authors write horrible books on subjects that are distasteful and we either have the right to read them or not read them. I do not believe in book banning. However, I do in school libraries. Put it back into the parents' hands. As a society, we have progressed in what we are willing to accept happening in society as a whole. From the seventies to the now, these things have changed. Does that make the books less important? No. You have a choice, either to keep going or stop. Laymon wrote of unacceptable things, and he was also writing horror. There is a difficult line to follow. Somehow some people want to put the same societal judgements on literature that is hundreds of years old and making judgements based on today. Not good nor is it smart. It is narrow and closed minded because really, it's not about you.

  • @Keyser666
    @Keyser666 Před rokem +1

    Read One Rainy Night when I was 15. I thought it BRILLIANT.

  • @user-ng9gd4vl9s
    @user-ng9gd4vl9s Před rokem

    Savage was a good try. His coqney narratives give up halfway through when he gets to the new world then it falls into saving a heroine who turns into future love interest.

  • @ruplayinggame3080
    @ruplayinggame3080 Před rokem +2

    I only read Laymon once, ten years ago, because this guy I was dating was obsessed with him. (both of us Romanians, in Romania, which is interesting that he made it there somehow). I read Quake and I hated it, it was just so terribly misogynistic. I remember the word 'rump' being used over and over and over. well, I broke up with that guy very soon after (for other reasons, not just my hate of Laymon) and now I read actually interesting horror. I recently saw that my ex rated My Heart Is A Chainsaw with 1-star on goodreads and for me it was my favorite book of the year in 2021 so that should tell us something! :)

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      Ha! Yeah agree that it's very peculiar that he made it to Romania! And a shame as I'm sure there are a great many better writers who didn't. I also loved My Heart is a Chainsaw. Sounds like you're best shot of the ex.

  • @anthonyjenkins2001
    @anthonyjenkins2001 Před rokem +1

    I've only read/listened to The Woods Are Dark and Savage. I didn't mind them.

  • @nunyabidness4220
    @nunyabidness4220 Před rokem

    I like Laymon, but all the criticisms of him are definitely valid. He's a problematic guy. And, aside from that, he's so mired down in formula that I can't read him more than once every couple of years, or I just start ticking off checkmarks in my head. It's a good formula, but he does repeat it in just about every book.
    What bugs me most about Laymon is he has some really scummy characters... which isn't a bad thing, IF you get a sense that the writer KNOWS it's a scummy character. I'm not always sure about that with Laymon. The Cellar has some over-the-top pedophilia in it, for instance, that Laymon seems to just shrug off as bad-but-not-that-big-a-deal. It's a lot more monstrous than he treats it.
    I think Laymon figured out in later years that he'd gone too far with the misogyny and did a few books with stronger female heroes, but you have to wade through some gack to get to those books.
    I remember Savage fondly, and really loved Night In The Lonesome October. The Traveling Vampire Show is effective, too, as I recall, and Midnight's Lair worked for me. But, yeah, he's one of those guys who you have to go into knowing you're going to have to overlook some things. The breast fetishization gets in the way of the books on a consistent basis. In the middle of rescuing someone, his heroes will get distracted by copping a feel or whatever. It gets silly as well as creepy. Anyway, yeah, you have to pick and choose among his work and be prepared for some ickiness, including some he DIDN'T intend and didn't seem to be aware of. He's got some "incel" attitudes, and, like most incels, doesn't realize what a creep he is to more normal people.

  • @ernestschultz5065
    @ernestschultz5065 Před rokem +1

    I have never even heard of him but the looks of his paperbacks remind me a lot of Dean Koontz books so that can't be a good thing.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      LOL he's more like early Koontz than late Koontz, but yes there are some similarities

  • @danielyeatts491
    @danielyeatts491 Před rokem +1

    I am a big fan of Resurrection Dreams. Really good book, very different from any horror or thriller I have read. Super memorable villain, and yes, he is a sexist creep, though that is NOT what is memorable about him. Great stuff. He may have missed the mark or been too misogynistic overall, but I feel he got this novel right.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      I think I've read that one, but absolutely ages ago. Will have to give it another try

  • @ritawilbur7343
    @ritawilbur7343 Před rokem

    I feel similarly about Stephen King. I've read quite a few of his older classics, and while they are very fun and scary, there's also an undertone - sometimes an overtone - of misogyny, racism, and homophobia that I just can't stomach. It's put me off reading any more of him, and I don't know whether his more recent books are better in that regard. However, I recently read some Joe Hill, and found the same thing, so I'm guessing it doesn't get better - and he definitely should know better! While in his short stories the good at least balanced and outweighed the bad, I had to stop reading "Horns." Both of them will put really offensive words in the mouths of the "bad guys", not in order to actually address issues of misogyny, racism, and homophobia, but as a way of showing these are "bad" characters. I really don't like that, and won't read more from either of them.

  • @MaggieTheCat01
    @MaggieTheCat01 Před 9 měsíci

    Yes, he loved writing about horny teens. Like you, I read them in the 80s and 90s. I _was_ a horny teen at the time, so I enjoyed them. I hated his incessant use of the word ‘gals,’ though. I think I remember him dropping it in later books.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 9 měsíci +1

      LOL yes I was a horny teen when I first read him too

  • @themiddleplace
    @themiddleplace Před rokem +1

    Very balanced and thoughtful assessment. I've read a few and feel pretty much the same, one mate once described it as 'reading for kicks' (not a comment on the the sicko side !) And another really bigged up the island to me once and this now makes sense because that guy WAS like laymon, harmless in real life,but a total perv. You're right is symptomatic of the time, to be fair to him tramps as villains and subhumanoids is a bit of a staple. Thing of the ENDLESS 80s 90s horror pics, with the bum by the oil drum. have you seen STREET TRASH?!! now that is a un pc movie. (For me so unpc that it kind of cacels itself) but yes it is good that the language has shifted. We are one and all only one degree from being them.
    Into the lonesome November is atmospheric, bit when I reread when I was older I noticed that on one level the whole thing is a rape fantasy! 😂
    One thing you neglected to mention is that EVERYONE who ever knew laymon said he was the nicest man in the world!

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      LOL at that last sentence! I guess it's the nice guys you have to watch out for.
      I have seen Street Trash and love it, but yeah agree it goes so far that it ceases to be offensive about any one particular thing

  • @chadjarnigan214
    @chadjarnigan214 Před rokem +1

    i am fairly new to Laymon books, only having a few read. I do find his horror to be a bit over the top, and the endings to his books for the ones i have read are cringe worthy honestly lol. The Woods are Dark , I actually liked the book quite a lot, but the ending for lack of better terms, pissed me off lol I dont mid the sexual stuff because i grew up in the 80s watching horror movies and thats pretty much all they were as well , a stalker/killer after teenagers that seem to always be sexual involved at the time of their deaths lol

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      Yeah he definitely taps into that 80s slasher vibe! Thanks for watching, Chad!

  • @ginabeena6757
    @ginabeena6757 Před 4 měsíci

    You had me at he makes breasts boring! 😂 I'm a straight woman and I think breasts are absolutely fantastic! Any writer that makes them dull is not for me! ❤️

  • @michellerever3564
    @michellerever3564 Před rokem +1

    Less than 5 minutes in, and I feel so seen. Let me preface this by saying I don't think writers believe everything they write, and horror gets to be horrifying, but that misogyny and portrayal of women in Endless Night felt too telling.
    Everyone in Endless Night sexualizes the two female characters, they sexualize themselves, and at least one of the sexualizes the other. So, when the villain does it, it feels like "join the crowd."
    I will never think of Laymon without thinking about the jokes around men writing women badly. He loves to have them breast boobily. Or to have one woman -- girl, really -- notice what the recoil from a gun does to the cleavage of another woman.
    Oh, and the kid who liked to stick his crotch in the main character's crotch and breathe in deeply for comfort. His family is dead -- hey, happens early on -- and his first impulse is to crotch sniff. And let's not go into when he is tempted to do the wrong thing.
    Then, the bad guy does drag and sexualizes himself, and that figures.
    Then, a dog rips his face open, and I really loved that part. 😐

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      Laymon for me has always been an uneasy blend of the enjoyable and the icky. He can write fun scenes of horror and suspense, but yeah you do feel like you’re seeing more of him on the page than you might want to

  • @jimhaggard7436
    @jimhaggard7436 Před rokem +1

    I like The Stake. Richard Laymon seemed to be in a state of sexual arrested development, with his obsession with topless women and/or submissive adult females and dominant male adolescents (Island).

  • @stephennootens916
    @stephennootens916 Před 2 lety +1

    I doubt anyone will read this but I read only one of his books. I can't really say I read it because I never finished it. The book was called a long night in October or something like that. It was really boring. The whole story was just about a college guy walking around the he town meeting few people including a weird chick who breaks in house and now and than weird shit happened. It was like there was no plot. And it was just badly written. I have to admit I was use to reading King who has things like plots and characters with depth not to mention he gives you real personal drama between said characters.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      I think that was one of his last books and I don’t think it’s one I’ve read. In my experience his books quite often don’t have plots in the normal sense. And his characters are rarely fleshed out at all. I do have a fondness for his work, for all it’s flaws though.

    • @stephennootens916
      @stephennootens916 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CriminOllyBlog I wouldn't mind the whole plot problem if there was something interesting going on. I have read Philip K Dick and his books feel plotless often, in fact they feel like slice of life only if that life was in some nightmarish future, but he gave you something. I might try him again but I can't say I will jump to read another one pf his books.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      @@stephennootens916 some of his books where he packs more action in can be fun

    • @stephennootens916
      @stephennootens916 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CriminOllyBlog If he is hopefully next time I spot his books it is going to be one of his better ones. Still he has to get behind Joe Hill Fireman (I have but still have not read) Bentley Little's The Store which I just started Robert McCammon's Sawn Song that might be my book for the fall and whatever King is bring out this September. That all said I will do my best to keep a open mind.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      @@stephennootens916 I completely agree with your ordering!

  • @francissookraj3202
    @francissookraj3202 Před 2 lety +2

    If Richard Laymon awful why is he a best-selling author? I like his writing style because his writing is simple and the story is straight to the point, and it's entertaining because it has what people like to read sex and violence, and of course horror. What more can you ask?

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      “Nobody ever lost a dollar by underestimating the taste of the American Public.” PT Barnum
      I totally agree. I love sex and violence too.

  • @Paul_Bond.
    @Paul_Bond. Před rokem +1

    Ha! Isn't the world strange. I watched this video and not two days later came across Island, in hardback in a local charity shop. I thought long and hard about it and decided, no, I don't need that in my life, thanks Olly!

  • @anthonyjenkins2001
    @anthonyjenkins2001 Před rokem +1

    9:22 i used to say the same thing about Stephen King and his rambling...until I read 11/22/63. A slog of a rambling novel that was NOT good

  • @aliarobinson6617
    @aliarobinson6617 Před 2 lety +1

    I don't mind misogony in characters not rl of course, but they have to be written well. If someone is a bad writer the plot can be flawless I won't be able to read it. the first time I read his and he wrote in an entire page of screaming noises, "arghhhhh" I just lol I was done.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety

      That's very true, good writing can make me forgive a lot of things!

  • @needley
    @needley Před 3 měsíci

    "Misogyny" oh no!!

  • @MindBloodandDark
    @MindBloodandDark Před 2 lety +1

    I like that you mentioned how besides being dodgy and weird in content, his descriptions tend to be, plain and simple, BORING! From a stylistic standpoint it is so often terrible and unenjoyable writing. I might try Savage since it sounds quite different, but having read two of his other books which were full of jiggling rumps, I think I’m good otherwise. 😂 A fantastic takedown of his work, Olly!

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you! I do think there is something fascinating about writer's whose inner self is on display as much as Laymon's is, but yeah, it does get a bit tiresome after a while.

  • @MalfunctioningAndroid

    Endless night is my fav

  • @julieannmyers8714
    @julieannmyers8714 Před rokem +2

    Here's a great book for those here who find Laymon a "great author":
    Forbidden Knowledge: From Prometheus to Pornography, Roger Shattuck, 1996.
    His conclusion: the ONLY type of material that must be censored by any sane society is sexual violence against women by males.
    It is a fascinating book in its historical scope, and I'm giving a lot away by revealing his conclusion... the journey he takes to get there is engrossing.
    Why he reaches this conclusion might be well to ponder by Laymon fans here.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem +1

      That does sound like an interesting book. Thanks, Julie

  • @jordil6152
    @jordil6152 Před rokem +1

    I just discovered Shane Stevens (By Reason of Insanity) and came across this video. Laymon seems right up my alley. Thanks for the heads up!

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před rokem

      Laymon is VERY different from Stevens! Stevens is great though!

  • @meghanlaue7964
    @meghanlaue7964 Před rokem

    If you like Jack the Ripper try The Cutthroat by Clive Cussler. Very good first person thriller.

  • @rayneeny
    @rayneeny Před 2 lety +1

    Glad to find your channel today thanks to Mr Steve D. I also read Laymon and share similar opinions on his works. Now to explore more of your videos.. Its nice to discover a fellow Brit on Booktube.

    • @CriminOllyBlog
      @CriminOllyBlog  Před 2 lety +1

      I find Laymon fascinating in that he's objectively awful but lots of fun - hope you enjoy the channel!

  • @delrey28
    @delrey28 Před rokem +2

    Sounds like proper horror. I shall read it.