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Bleeding Shadows

af Joe R. Lansdale

MedlemmerAnmeldelserPopularitetGennemsnitlig vurderingSamtaler
782342,534 (3.81)Ingen
Lansdale's largest, most varied collection to date. These stories, poems, and novellas--supplemented by the author's introduction and by an invaluable set of story notes--move effortlessly from horror, adventure, and suspense to literary pastiche. It is, by any measure, a major addition to an already impressive body of work. The volume opens with 'Torn Away,' in which a small town sheriff encounters a man on the run from his own predatory shadow. The stories that follow come from all points of the narrative compass. In 'Morning, Noon, and Night,' a young boy stumbles across a monstrous, multi-faceted killer from which there is no escape. 'The Bleeding Shadow' is a tale of music, monsters, and deals-with-the devil set in post-WWII Texas. In 'Star Light, Eyes Bright,' an ordinary husband makes a startling discovery, one that leads to an unimaginable act of personal transformation. Elsewhere, the author offers us twisted Christmas stories ('Santa at the Cafe'), tales of a zombie apocalypse ('A Visit with Friends'), and one story--'Christmas with the Dead'--that encompasses both of these elements. Other highlights include a pair of informed, affectionate acts of literary homage. 'Metal Men of Mars' pays tribute to the Martian novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs, while in 'Dread Island,' the masterful novella that concludes this collection, the world of Huckleberry Finn merges seamlessly with the worlds of H. P. Lovecraft and Joel Chandler Harris.… (mere)
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Viser 2 af 2
Reading "Santa at the Café", "Christmas Monkeys" and "Christmas with the Dead" on Christmas Eve! Fun!!!

I'm a big Lansdale fan, so a book like this is a buffet for me! Pretty much great stories throughout, with only a couple of clunkers. My favorite of the group is "Mr. Bear" which just absolutely killed me! I also very much enjoyed his "Story Notes" at the end! Lots of cool insight in that section! Especially cool was the fact that I had felt I had read "Soldier'n" and "Hide and Horns" before, but after reading the "Notes" on them, I realized he had in fact written his Deadwood Dick novel, and I had read it - "Paradise Sky"! Loved it too!

Good read all around, with a good lesson too! Never "moon" a black car full of nuns. Never. ( )
  Stahl-Ricco | Dec 30, 2016 |
I'll be updating this review with ratings of individual stories as I work my way through, not necessarily in order.

This book is MASSIVE for a collection of new short stories! So happy to have plenty of new Lansdale shorts to last me for the next few months (if I can manage to make it last that long).

**** Torn Away

Lansdale kicks off this collection with a nice dark fantasy, a small town sheriff encounters a strange man sitting in his car by the tracks...and something is hot on his heels. A nice way to open the collection, this story would make a great Masters of Horror episode, like his Incident On and Off a Mountain Road.

**** The Bleeding Shadow

This story is twice as long as the one that preceded it, and although the flavor of the locales and characters are quite different, it also shares the theme of a man being chased down by an unstoppable...something. The story is told through the eyes of an African-american amateur detective and set in the 1950s, and concerns tracking down a lover's brother, a blues man, who may have bit off more than he can chew.

The storytelling is wonderful, classic Lansdale all the way around in this one. Full of thrills, chills and chuckles.


**** A Visit with Friends

I can't really give too much away about this story without ruining the experience, since it's an "onion" type of Lansdale story, where you slowly peel back each layer of your assumptions regarding what's going on. Suffice it to say I really enjoyed this one.

**** Christmas Monkeys

This is one of those very short and sweet snippets of Lansdale insanity. You either love 'em or you don't.

I love 'em. If you've read his micro-short "Dog, Cat and Baby" in the Dark Masques collection then you know the kind of cloth this is cut from, a "Godzilla's Ten-Step Program" kind of thing.

**** Christmas with the Dead

Lansdale tries his hand at zombies (I'm sure he has before), and mostly succeeds. I'm not a huge fane of the zombie genre in general, but I did enjoy this story. Not a whole lot new or groundbreaking here - I guess the most you can say is that Lansdale has somehow managed to write a homespun and downright cozy-feeling zombie tale with this one. Not sure how they managed to stretch this out into a movie though. (http://www.horror-movies.ca/2012/10/trailer-for-christmas-with-the-dead/)

UPDATE: I just watched that trailer. Ugh - I don't recommend it. That movie looked cheap and terrible and nothing like the story I just read at all.

*** Quarry

The subtitle of this story notes that it's an "Associational sequel to Richard Matheson's PREY". I love Matheson, and the title "Prey" sounded familiar, but I pulled out my copy of "Richard Matheson Collected Stories Vol. 3" and read the original story again to freshen my memory. It's a story about a small cursed figurine of a Zuni warrior named HE WHO KILLS. Great little tale, I'm going to read it to the kids one of these days.

Anyway, Lansdale tries his hand at telling the story of another unlucky owner of HE WHO KILLS. It's not bad, by any means, but reading this immediately after the original made it pale a bit in comparison. Probably best to let a little time pass between the two.

**** Santa at the Cafe

I had to start with this story, since I had entered my own Santa-themed story previously in a Lansdale-judged short story competition ([b:The Package|18584784|The Package|Evans Light|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1384745596s/18584784.jpg|26322353]).

This story bore no resemblance. Smooth and flowing in typical Lansdale fashion, this crime tale would fit perfectly as a subplot in PULP FICTION. Very enjoyable, and ince to see that the quality is stilll high, even deep into the latter part of the collection.
  Evans-Light | Nov 8, 2015 |
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Lansdale's largest, most varied collection to date. These stories, poems, and novellas--supplemented by the author's introduction and by an invaluable set of story notes--move effortlessly from horror, adventure, and suspense to literary pastiche. It is, by any measure, a major addition to an already impressive body of work. The volume opens with 'Torn Away,' in which a small town sheriff encounters a man on the run from his own predatory shadow. The stories that follow come from all points of the narrative compass. In 'Morning, Noon, and Night,' a young boy stumbles across a monstrous, multi-faceted killer from which there is no escape. 'The Bleeding Shadow' is a tale of music, monsters, and deals-with-the devil set in post-WWII Texas. In 'Star Light, Eyes Bright,' an ordinary husband makes a startling discovery, one that leads to an unimaginable act of personal transformation. Elsewhere, the author offers us twisted Christmas stories ('Santa at the Cafe'), tales of a zombie apocalypse ('A Visit with Friends'), and one story--'Christmas with the Dead'--that encompasses both of these elements. Other highlights include a pair of informed, affectionate acts of literary homage. 'Metal Men of Mars' pays tribute to the Martian novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs, while in 'Dread Island,' the masterful novella that concludes this collection, the world of Huckleberry Finn merges seamlessly with the worlds of H. P. Lovecraft and Joel Chandler Harris.

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