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Derek McCormack

Auteur de The Haunted Hillbilly

12 oeuvres 233 utilisateurs 6 critiques 1 Favoris

Œuvres de Derek McCormack

The Haunted Hillbilly (2003) 63 exemplaires
The Show That Smells (2009) 32 exemplaires
Grab Bag (2004) 28 exemplaires
Dark Rides (1996) 23 exemplaires
Castle Faggot (2020) 23 exemplaires
Christmas Days (1592) 19 exemplaires
Wish Book (2003) 18 exemplaires
A Novel by Ken Sparling (2003) 3 exemplaires
Wild Mouse (1998) 3 exemplaires

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My Thoughts:

A factious Hank Williams, a factious Grand Ol' Opry, a factious Nudie (the Western Wear guy) who happens to be a gay vampire who runs a sideshow on the side complete with wax museum and abnormal babies in jars...thing is as funny or interesting or entertaining as it might sound, it's not. I don't remember laughing once and the only reason I finished the book was because it's so short. The horror factor wasn't there either perhaps due to the minimalist wording. It just falls short of depth. Don't waste your time.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Carol420 | 1 autre critique | May 31, 2016 |
Book Title: "Grab Bag”
Author: Derek McCormack
Published By: Little House on the Bowery/Akashic Books
Age Recommended: 18+
Reviewed By: Kitty Bullard
Raven Rating: 5

Review: Yet another interesting and intriguing read from one of the authors at Akashic Books. “Grab Bag” was exactly what it promised to be, one short story and a ‘grab bag’ of various tales that ranged from humorous to somewhat macabre. These stories are sure to have you asking…. “Why?” “What the heck?” and “Seriously?” Still you can’t help but find them superbly intriguing.
Warning: There are moments of intimacy that many may not wish to read. Do not get a copy of this book if you are easily offended.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
RavenswoodPublishing | May 8, 2012 |
It’s fitting that filmmaker Guy Maddin’s review is so prominently featured on the cover of Derek McCormack’s latest. These two have much more in common than their shared Canadian roots.

Like Maddin’s films, McCormack’s wicked little novels are a style unto themselves; unlike anything else on the literary landscape. The Show That Smells manages to evoke the atmosphere of a grainy, sepia-tinted early talkie, while at the same time being nearly impossible to place in any particular time period. Written like a film treatment, replete with a cast of characters that includes country singer Jimmie Rodgers, fashion doyenne Coco Chanel, horror film star Lon Chaney as well as the author himself, it centers around some of McCormack’s favorite themes - a troubled marriage, old school country music, vampirism and haute couture. All the action takes place in the fun house hall of mirrors, where the hypnotically repetitive prose manages to conjure the grotesque, yet campy, outlaw world of carnie life.

Oh, and it’s funny too. Pitch dark humor, to be sure, but funny as hell.

After reading The Haunted Hillbilly I was eager to give the rest of Derek McCormack’s work a try and this one did not disappoint. Wry, dry and pretty darned creepy.

That’s entertainment.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
blakefraina | 1 autre critique | Aug 8, 2010 |
Derek McCormack’s prose is honed to a razor sharp point. It’s so precise, the words are so well-chosen, that you scarcely notice how few of them there actually are. This is a lean, mean little novel that packs a thrilling punch. There is not one extraneous word. I am in awe.

And while it’s tempting to focus on the technical wizardry alone, which is considerable, truth is, this is no case of style over substance. The story McCormack has concocted is weird, creepy, crude and very funny.

The Haunted Hillbilly is an alternative history of the rise [and premature demise] of country crooner Hank Williams. In McCormack’s hands, he is a slightly dimwitted pawn who is taken under the wing of Nudie, a manipulative couturier, who also happens to be a gay vampire. Dressed in Nudie’s gaudy, bespangled creations, Hank wins over the crowd at the Grand Ole Opry before the Svengali-like vampire subjects him, and the women who love him, to one Grand Guignol torment after another. It might get downright disturbing if it wasn’t all so outrageously camp. I loved it.

McCormack is a real find. I can’t wait to sink my teeth into the rest of his work.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
blakefraina | 1 autre critique | Feb 22, 2010 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
12
Membres
233
Popularité
#96,932
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
6
ISBN
20
Favoris
1

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