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Indlæser... John Dies at the End (udgave 2012)af David Wong
Work InformationJohn Dies at the End af David Wong
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Top Five Books of 2020 (786) Books Read in 2018 (1,587) Books Read in 2017 (2,007) » 14 mere Unreliable Narrators (106) Books Read in 2019 (3,830) Overdue Podcast (636) Best Horror Mega-List (340) First Novels (349) A Novel Cure (741) Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. There's an awful awful lot of death in John Dies At The End. As well as lots of monsters, ghosts, demons from hell, and what have you. But despite lots of gooey, gory, and bloody scenes this is more a comic novel than a horror story. It's delightfully funny at times. On the other hand,there are too many times when the humor becomes pretty much childish.Which is unfortunate, because in my opinion, this could have been a much better novel if it hadn't stooped to such sophomoric levels of humor as often as it did. Almost four stars, but the book is just a little too unfocused and repetitive at times. I'm sure that's a result of how it was originally serialized. Plus I always hold a grudge against people who mention Plano, Texas, while clearly having no understanding of what Plano is. This book is pretty humorous throughout but it is also way too long. For me, this is one of those rare instances where the movie was better than the book. The film told the same basic story much more succinctly.
John Dies at the End is a novel written by David Wong (Pseudonym for Jason Parguin) that was first published 2007 by Permuted Press. The book really cannot be described as horror, nor is it really a thriller. There are elements of Sci Fi, Noir, Hard Boiled Detective, Comedy and a few other genres. The book in turns reminds me of Raymond Chandler, Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, Charles Burn’s comic books, The work of the Church of Subgenus, Jack Chick Tracts, The Outer Limits TV show and more. There are times when the work has stupid dick jokes and quips that make me roll my eyes, other times I’m pasting post it notes to mark a poignant passage. This is possibly the most mixed up and ADHD work I have ever read. (I have ADHD so I can say that.) I enjoyed the work immensely as I have all of this authors other works. I can’t say I am a rabid fan, but I liked this author’s works enough to seek it out and read it all so that speaks, Pun unintended- Volumes. I had some times where I was impatient with the book, but eventually these parts always paid off. I was dismayed as the long list of racial slurs that litter this work, some more than others. This book may offend some people, so warning. I don’t mean just a few but some racial slurs I won’t repeat are said so often it made me take pause. I don’t believe that the work is racist in any obvious sense, but there is something there when the words are used so often that it starts to make me feel uncomfortable. Some of Wong’s fans may say I’m making too much of it, but if you have not read the book I want you to know about that beforehand. The fact that a non-Chinese man uses a Chinese name as a kind of fun Pseudonym may offend others as well so that’s something to ponder. I’ve wondered why this author continues to keep the Pseudonym. Only he can say. I do recommend this work to anyone, it’s very well written and fun. I enjoyed it immensely. “Scientists talk about dark matter, the invisible, mysterious substance that occupies the space between stars. Dark matter makes up 99.99 percent of the universe, and they don't know what it is. Well I do. It's apathy. That's the truth of it; pile together everything we know and care about in the universe and it will still be nothing more than a tiny speck in the middle of a vast black ocean of Who Gives a Fuck.” ― David Wong, John Dies at the End The book was followed by a sequel, This Book Is Full of Spiders, in 2012. JDATE is the rare genre novel that manages to keep its sense of humor strong without ever diminishing the scares; David is a consistently hilarious narrator whose one-liners and running commentary are sincere in a way that makes the horrors he confronts even more unsettling. Plot-wise, for a good two-thirds of the book, it seems like Wong is more interested in piling on weirder and weirder threats than fitting the pieces together, and while his invention never flags, the accumulation of horrors eventually threatens to turn the narrative into a breathless series of “And then?”s. Still, the tone and white-knuckle pacing cover up a lot of sins, and Wong manages to pull everything together for a finale that’s both stomach-churningly freaky and oddly moving. It’s the sort of thing that leaves readers breathless and nauseous, but surprisingly hungry for more. Notable Lists
This may be the story of John and David, a drug called soy sauce, and other-worldly beings invading the planet. Or, it may be the story of two beer-drinking friends who live in an unnamed Midwestern town and only think something horrific is going on. But the important thing is, according to the narrator, "None of this is my fault." No library descriptions found. |
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![]() GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC-klassificeringVurderingGennemsnit:![]()
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