Scream Queen
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Customer Reviews
Scream Queen
Scream Queen
Grace C B4
1/20/06
The name of the book I read was, "Scream Queen," by Edo Van Belkom. It was about two producers named Ike and Erwin Gowan who used to make famous horror films. Instead of a horror film, they wanted to make a reality TV show. The show would be called, "Scream Queen," and take place in a haunted house. There would be six contestants that would have to make it through the night without leaving the house. The winner of the show would get a cash prize and a starring role in their next horror film. The only problem was the Gowan brothers didn't know that the house was truly haunted. The six contestants were, Jody, Forrest, Tamisha, Melanie, Radko, and Vonda. The rest of the book is about how they strive to make it through the night. The types of things they have to face are things such as ghosts, dead bodies, people disappearing, rats, and the house itself. The conflict of the book was overall pretty scary and kind of gross.
This book was really exciting to read especially because of the cliffhangers. It was also exciting to me because I love horror books that freak me out. Also, there was never a dull moment; there was always something happening whether it was someone disappearing or something going wrong with the house. For the most part I felt like I was in the book because of the amazing descriptions the author used to describe the characters and how the felt. But sometimes it didn't feel like I was in the book because some of the things weren't very realistic. The main conflict did interest me because of how different it was. The book was interesting because the whole story was a reality show that went bad instead of everything being perfect. The characters were realistic because there were many types of people. There was a rich girl, a cocky guy, a girl with attitude, a laid back guy and girl, and kind of a crazy girl. The book's ending was actually pretty disappointing. I thought the ending would include something crazy happening but it just kind of stopped. There were no surprises or anything.
The author's voice was the characters thoughts and actions. He also narrated other sections of the book. The vocabulary the author chose was interesting because he used a lot of metaphors and similes to describe the feelings of people. The way he writes was kind of weird. It was weird because was mainly dialogue between the six contestants in a creepy setting of a haunted house. His description was amazing, that was what jumped out at me the most. It was easy to imagine what was happening and what the haunted house looked like. The tone was good because it set the mood to the book which was really scary and sad. Overall I think Edo Van Belkom was strong in using description.
I rate this book a four out of five because I love this kind of genre but the ending was pretty bad. I would recommend this book to anyone who likes horror and gore books that have a lot of suspense. Also, this book could be for a guy or a girl but I don't know if anyone too young should read this because it gets kind of gross. I think a lot of boys would like this book because of the gore in it.
I really liked this book and the author. It was interesting how the contestants had to act out a scene from a famous movie in order to qualify for the starring role in their next movie. The best part of the book was when things started happening, such as when the producers tricked Jody. They acted out a murder realistic murder scene to see how scared she would get. The worst part of the book was the ending but I would definitely choose another one of Edo Van Belkom's books.
2006-01-24
| Helpful Votes: 0 | Rating: 4
reality bites!
Not everyone is a fan of reality television. I happen to be one of those odd folks who can't get enough of "did they really do that" television. SCREAM QUEEN takes a familiar theme, the haunted house, and spins it on a dime! This is good stuff! The horror is sudden and unexpected, and even when you know it's coming, Belkom still delivers. My only quarrel with this book was the smackdown ending. It felt jarring and unfinished. But isn't that what "reality" is all about?
SCREAM QUEEN is a good read. I can think of only a handful of authors who consistently bring it and Edo Van Belkom has taken his spot on my list. This a horror classic! SCREAM QUEEN rocks!!
2005-03-07
(Garrett, KY) | Helpful Votes: 0 | Rating: 4
Frightening
I am a fan of thriller and horror novels. This book will have you keeping your light on at night. It is a very good read and if you are into spirits and hauntings, you will definitely enjoy this one!!!
2004-11-11
(Grand Prairie, Tx United States) | Helpful Votes: 0 | Rating: 5
The new "genre fiction"
Edo van Belkom, Scream Queen (Pinnacle, 2003)
Ah, a return to the glory days of eighties horror. Back then, there were your great writers, there were your A-list writers (who were good, but rarely approached greatness, and never with any regularity), and then, as A Christmas Story wryly tells us, there were "the nameless rabble of victims," those all-but-anonymous genre writers whose work is now lost to the wind. (That the same can be said of many of the greats in no way makes the two in any way similar.) For every John Holt, Edward Levy, or Michael Paine writing in the eighties, you had ten Ken Eulos, Saul Wernicks, and William Hills.
These days, the ratio seems to have been turned on its head. You can find great horror writers under every rock. Poppy Z. Brite, Caitlin R. Kiernan, Charlee Jacob, Carlton Mellick III, and their ilk have raised the bar for literary horror far past any place I could have hoped it would go when I first discovered that avatar of literate horror, Clive Barker. Nowadays, you have to search pretty far for the genre writer, the guy whose books are going to sell a few hundred thousand copies and then fade into obscurity.
Scream Queen falls solidly into the realm of genre fiction destined for obscurity. But like the best work of Eulo, Wernick, Hill et al., while it sticks around, those few hundred thousand readers who take van Belkom up on his offer to ride through this funhouse are going to have one hell of a trip.
Scream Queen gives us such an obvious premise it's amazing no one's actually pulled it off yet: two brothers who direct low-budget horror films stage a reality TV show, Scream Queen, the winner of which gets the lead part in the brothers' new movie. All the winner has to do is spend the night in a hunted house (rigged with tricks, natch, to scare the contestants), then have the public vote on her as the best of the contestants. Simple, right? (And brilliant. Expect it to happen in real life in the next couple of years. That's a reality series even I would watch.) The only problem is that the haunted house the producers and their team have tricked out really IS a haunted house, and the ghosts therein are not very happy to receive guests.
The action starts early and continues pretty much nonstop (there are some slow points for setup, but the writing is such that even they go by quickly). This is a slim novel, by modern horror standards, three hundred pages even. They fly. The reader is likely to find himself jarred at least once per page by stupid typos (and the obviously far overpaid editor never met a homonym he didn't misuse), but after a while you gloss those over and just get on with it. Nothing here is likely to make you say "boy, that was unexpected!" or think van Belkom has a line on the next great idea to move the whole genre forward.
If this were a movie, it'd be turn-your-brain-off entertainment. As a book, it's fluff, but readable fluff.***
2004-03-31
| xterminal (Cleveland, OH) | Helpful Votes: 1 | Rating: 3
Dull, Predictable, and Nothing Original
Wow! Was this book bad. Not only am I in the film industry, but I'm a huge fan of horror. So I thought this book would be perfect for me. Unfortunately, with little to no character development or atmosphere, this book is dead on arrival. I have to say, Scream Queen is the most predictable horror novel I've ever read. Every single scene I've seen done before. The author also makes quite a few mistakes when describing positions on a film crew. It's no wonder Mr. Van Belkom got his technical information about filmmaking from Ron Oliver -- the director of Prom Night III ! I also found it funny to learn that this author has written books on how to write horror and erotica when this book contains neither! Scream Queen is a total flop and a complete waste of time. Stay away.
2004-02-27
(Bronxville, NY USA) | Helpful Votes: 1 | Rating: 1