hotwords229_A
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2017
- Posts
- 21,442
Way ahead of you, my good man! Part 2 is playing.![]()
Part 2 Jason was the best Jason—in my opinion.
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Way ahead of you, my good man! Part 2 is playing.![]()



It's official. I was meant to be the heroine in a Mary Stewart romantic suspense novel.
I'll take Wildfire at Midnight. The Isle of Skye, mountaineering, murder. Toss in a little philosophy and pagan mythology and *boom* you have yourself some suspense!
Besides, who doesn't like the isolated island equivalent of a good locked-room style mystery?
Besides, besides, she always has interesting words and phrases: scree, preux chevalier, wether, greaves and cuirasses, needfire, and a mhic a diabhail.
*nods vigorously*
That last one means son of the devil.![]()
Accckkk! Another one of my favorite 'older' authors! I even have this one in my bookcase; I haven't read it in ages, but I remember it being really good. Remember "The Moon-Spinners", that was made into, I think, a Disney movie with Haley Mills? (I may have that totally wrong, but I remember a scene with windmills...) And The Merlin books (The Crystal Cave, Hollow Hills, Last Enchantment and The Wicked Day) are among my favorite books ever.
easter eggs. 
"Atmospheric," yes, that's a good word for it. Such magical settings she chose - Greece, Isle of Skye, Provence, Corfu, Wales. Thornyhold I bet you would like -"With its reputation for magic and its resident black cat, Thornyhold offers..." from the Amazon review. BTW, have you read Frenchman's Creek (back to du Maurier)? I reread it last year, and it brought tears to my eyes.She is another pull from the parental bookcase. I've read most of her earlier romantic suspense (supposedly the best) but it's been FOREVER. Somehow I missed reading the Merlin books. I'm not sure how, as I believe those were around, but it is so.
Her writing is just so good. So well written. Atmospheric settings and interesting plots like the classical dressage in Airs Above the Ground. Or Nine Coaches Waiting, with it's epigraphs and Easter eggs peppering the plot and struchture. Ieaster eggs.
Rediscovering these makes me sad how far the romantic suspense genre has fallen. *shakes head woefully*
And, yes! There was a Disney version of The Moon-Spinners starring Haley Mills!
It is nothing like the book.![]()

Did you ever read The Birds by Daphne du Maurier? I’ve always wondered if it was anything like the movie.

I read it a long long time ago. As I recall, it bore little to no similarity to the movie. It was creepier.Did you ever read The Birds by Daphne du Maurier? I’ve always wondered if it was anything like the movie.

I read it a long long time ago. As I recall, it bore little to no similarity to the movie. It was creepier.
*votes with Jenny*
The short story was nothing like the movie. NOTHING. Honestly, I don't think a single movie character appeared in the original writing! And, Holy Cats, my respect for du Maurier's writing went up another notch. I did not know she wrote horror.
Fantasy, Suspense, and horror. Quite the trifecta!
It seems most of her short stories are horror? Who knew?
The Birds was good. Not what I was expected, but good.![]()


For one hot second - that felt like an hour - I thought this was a list of film noir of which I had never heard.< It seems you can take a group of “hard” words and string them together to come up with any noir title.
A Bullet for a Broad
A Scream in the Night
The Concrete Sidewalk
Shadows of Darkness
Her Deadliest Gun
Those could all be noir stories and their plots could be about anything!.>
)
For one hot second - that felt like an hour - I thought this was a list of film noir of which I had never heard.
I could not catch my breath.
Completely nonplussed.
Speechless.
(And let me just say that it’s that last one is not easy to accomplish.)
Hard words. Interesting. Not a concept that has occurred. Huh.
Noir films, completely off the top of my heard.
The Maltese Falcon
Strangers on a Train
Vertigo
Sunset Boulevard
Murder My Sweet
Laura?

)< I also like (probably) all of the Dan Duryea movies. That guy is awesome and the perfect noir villain.
Too Late for Tears (or Killer Bait) is a personal favorite. >
I've been trying to look through the tv guides to catch my fav old Christmas movies and found It Happened on Fifth Avenue on Saturday and Holiday Affair and Christmas in Connecticut (again, with the sublime Ms. Stanwyck) on Sunday on TCM. Oddly, they're showing Bell, Book an Candle now instead of back at Halloween. BUT, while I was looking I saw that on Saturday The Maltese Falcon is on, and on Tuesday Dial M for Murder and Rear Window are on. Just in case anyone is still watching cable tv besides me.![]()

Dan Duryea? Too Late for Tears?
I have not heard of either. How can this be?
*toodles off to google*

*returns*
Huh. I am surprised. Shocked, actually. Duryea's wiki page mentions at least six specific film noirs by name.
I have not heard of a single one….
Clearly there are holes in my film noir education. Clearly this must be rectified. You know, in the name of film noir research.![]()
