House of Leaves - a review :marseyreading:

Horror is probably my favorite genre of literature. I'd say more than half of the books I read and have read are horror. After seeing a few reviews and recommendations on the House of Leaves I was very intrigued.

House of Leaves is a very challenging read. The story follows the main character Johnny Truant who finds an incomplete manuscript written by a recently deceased man named Zampano. The manuscript is a documentary of a photojourn*list by the name of Will Navidson and his wife Karen who have purchased a house which they soon find is larger on the inside than the outside.

House of Leaves has footnotes. It has footnotes of footnotes and appendixes of footnotes and footnotes with appendixes. It has footnotes from both Zampano and Johnny Truant.

Its writing style is difficult to follow, often makes you turn the book upside down or on its side, and is overall kind of fricking boring. Don't get me wrong, it's a cool book. The concept is incredible and such a unique experience. Unfortunately, so often throughout this book, I found myself wishing it would stay on track and continue the main story of the Navidson Record (the storyline I found most interesting)

More than half of this book is about Johnny Truant slowly losing his mind as he compiles Zampanos manuscript, Truant's heavy drug abuse and s*x addiction, and chapters long mind numbingly boring descriptions of the meaning and origin of words by Zampano.

With that said, would I recommend a new reader altogether skip Johnny Truants storyline? I can't say that I would. It does round out the novel and serve a deeper meaning. Understanding Truants state of mind while he is compiling House of Leaves is essential to understanding the house in itself.

Overall I'd give the book an 8/10. I finished in a week and even with its boring parts I could not put it down. I would recommend anyone who enjoys literature read this book. This book is more of an experience than a story. Its ability to drag you in and immerse you is truly unmatched.

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How tedious would you say the gimmick with the weird layout is? Do you think it intends to be scary, or just uncomfortable?

I've never tried to read it but I think I'd like to read a scary one after I get through my next haul, but idk if I have the patience if the reading experience is tiring :marseyhmm:

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I found that it really added to the reading experiwnce personally. It made me feel more immersed in the story, almost like I was part of it as another layer of observation. I would never reccomend this book on kindle/pdf and thats how I ussually read books.

!slots222

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Not very tedious, honestly. It's not the entire book - and the parts where it gets really insane like in the picture I posted you're not intended to read most of the page.

I think it intends to be both. It isn't the scariest book I've ever read but what's scary to me may not be scary for you. It's definitely more uncomfortable. It makes you feel very claustrophobic and scattered.

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