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David Prill

Auteur de Serial Killer Days: A Novel

12+ oeuvres 103 utilisateurs 5 critiques

Œuvres de David Prill

Serial Killer Days: A Novel (1996) 33 exemplaires
The Unnatural: A Novel (1995) 23 exemplaires
Second Coming Attractions (1998) 20 exemplaires
Cemetery Dance Issue 57 (2007) 6 exemplaires
White Pumpkins 1 exemplaire
Rocket Fall 1 exemplaire
Show Of Hands 1 exemplaire
The Midland Specter 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Salon Fantastique: Fifteen Original Tales of Fantasy (2006) — Contributeur — 129 exemplaires
Poe: 19 New Tales Inspired by Edgar Allan Poe (2009) — Contributeur — 124 exemplaires
Zombies: The Recent Dead (2010) — Contributeur — 122 exemplaires
Logorrhea: Good Words Make Good Stories (2007) — Contributeur — 120 exemplaires
Subterranean: Tales of Dark Fantasy 2 (2011) — Contributeur — 55 exemplaires
Fantasy: The Best of 2002 (2003) — Contributeur — 35 exemplaires
Subterranean Magazine, Issue #3 (Winter 2006) (2006) — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires

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Critiques

Prill's book is an extremely twisted parody of Malamud's The Natural. The kicker? In The Unnatural, America's National Pastime isn't baseball. It's competitive embalming. Yep. I said embalming.
 
Signalé
Mrs_McGreevy | 1 autre critique | Nov 17, 2016 |
Imagine a small midwestern town preyed upon by a serial killer. Now imagine the town fathers offering a deal: we'll choose one girl a year as a sacrifice, and for the rest of the year you leave us alone and we'll leave you alone. Now imagine a festival, as only small towns can have, springing up around this annual event, with high school girls competing to be crowned queen and sacrifice. Prill is a twisted man, but a funny one.
 
Signalé
Mrs_McGreevy | Nov 17, 2016 |
Back in 1995, David Prill wrote The Unnatural, a strange and funny look at America’s Pastime: competetive embalming. I don’t know why. But it was deadpan and sly and even charming. He followed this up with 1996’s Serial Killer Days, which is about an annual small-town festival which culminates in the murder of the festival queen. Again he took the rituals of American life and twisted them into something totally unique and very very funny. In 1998, he published Second Coming Attractions, a Prill-ian (Prill-esque? Prill-ish?) peek inside the world of religious filmmakers. And after that? Nothing. Nada. Zilch. We kept waiting and hoping, and in 2002 finally the long drought was over with Subterranean Press’s publication of Prill’s new collection Dating Secrets of the Dead.

The title story is a look at teenage dating after death. The tone is brilliant—very reminiscent of one of those old health class filmstrips (or, for younger readers, the health & hygiene films they sometimes showed during MST3K). It is an unusual writer who can balance the funny, the charming and the grotesque, but Prill is very good at it. You’re rooting for Jerry and Caroline even as you’re laughing at the inevitable outward manifestations of the deacying process.

The second story is much darker. “Carnyvore” is a much more straightforward horror story, right out of the old EC Comics: self-righteous townsfolk cause the failure of a traveling circus and the carnies take their revenge. It’s not a humorous story, but Prill does take the old Cryptkeeper’s delight in the justice imposed on the hypocritical “normals” by the carnival folk.

The final story is yet another departure for Prill. “The Last Horror Show” is a Bradbury-esque tale of the gradual end of the traveling horror show and the boy who grows up as the shows fade away. Prill does a marvelous job of capturing a kid’s joy in the schlocky live horror shows that traveled around a film circuit providing live screams and chills and laughs before a horror movie. It’s easy to get caught up in Davy’s enthusiasm. But Prill does an equally fine job at showing us the people behind the show, with their own hopes and dreams, and how they try to hold onto them as those dreams inexorably fade away. “The Last Horror Show” really shines.

Three very different stories from one talented writer. I can only hope that Dating Secrets of the Dead is merely a hint of things to come.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Mrs_McGreevy | Nov 17, 2016 |
Death is unavoidable. Whether it is your own death or that of someone else, everyone experiences it. For those who have not had a chance to take part in a funeral, death seems like a distant reality with each passing day. For those whose profession is in funerals, death is a cut-throat business (no pun intended). David Prill has created a world where the importance of world politics, world wars, and mass media are overshadowed by embalming. Embalming is not just a method to preserve corpses, it is an art, a competition, and above all a business. Andy Archway learns just how competitive the funeral business is as he attends one of the best Embalming universities in order to become a. Professional Embalmer and beat the embalming record his hero Mordecai holds. Along the way there is love, death, treachery, but mostly dead. One of the best unknown novels I have ever read.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
DavidSilva | 1 autre critique | Dec 26, 2011 |

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Œuvres
12
Aussi par
7
Membres
103
Popularité
#185,855
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
5
ISBN
4

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