Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
31 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Poppy Z. A master of purple proze!, March 25, 2000
I've been waiting for the soft cover edition forever and after buying it i finally sat down and devoured the contents spellbound, Even though every novel of Miss. Brite is a masterpiece, her true strenth lays in the form she cut her teeth on. The short story. Every story is a beautifull gem,a self contained work that i find different, more literate, more culturaly aware than every other dark fantasy/horror writer out there, The storys here are newer than the ones in her other collection (wormwood, most of it's storys written in the 80's) so these reflect her newer interests along with her old (voodoo,serial killers, asian culture,gothic/deather trappings, the american south)all told in a poetic, purple, lirical voice, buy imediatly!
|
|
|
20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Everything I expect from a Poppy Z. Brite collection, June 4, 2000
"Are You Loathsome Tonight?" is a little pricey for such a small volume (185 pages) but as a big fan of Poppy Z. Brite's work I felt it was worth splurging on. Why? Because I got a quickie update on two of my favorite lovers, Trevor and Zach from "Drawing Blood" who, as she puts it, are still in "happy, disgusting, perfect love" - that short story alone was worth the cost of the book for me. Other highlights were "King of the Cats" a sweet, kinky, imaginative retelling of the fairytale "The Poor Miller's Apprentice and the Cat", "Self-Made Man" is another favorite because I can't seem to resist a good graphic zombie/cannibalistic tale, and "Saved" was another stand-out that is both violently erotic and terribly sad. If you've never read Poppy Z. Brite you might want to start out with "Drawing Blood" or "Lost Souls" before you delve into this collection.
|
|
|
18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Are You Loathesome Tonight? "Yes...", August 26, 2000
I finally picked up Poppy Z. Brite's latest short story collection. The book cover looks so cheap it is a blasphemy to the literary gold that's inside. These stories mark a new direction for Poppy Z. Brite, with her exploring historical fiction and including people such as Elvis. Some of the stories are so short that you wonder, "Is that it?" But there are still some good points. "Vine of the Soul" features an update on Trevor and Zach from DRAWING BLOOD, and "America" is a ditty about Poppy's favorite characters, Steve and Ghost from LOST SOULS. I have to say that my favorite was "Monday's Special," in which Poppy Z. Brite has become a coroner who specializes in weird corpses. "Self Made Man" is also a standout, a horrific tale about a serial killer a la Jeffrey Dahmer whose victims' bodies come to life and eat him. We get such terrifying images of a corpse arising from a bathtub and a severed head rolling around in a refrigerator. "Entertaining Mr. Orton" is very high caliber, if a tad bit all over the place. "King of the Cats" is wonderfully offbeat and has a Grimm's Fairy Tale feel to it. There is one horrible story, and it is "Are You Loathesome Tonight." Elvis does not belong in the nightmarish landscape of Poppy Z. Brite, I'm sorry."Are You Loathesome Tonight" is okay, but as a hardcore Poppy Z. Brite fan, I pray every night that she will write another novel.
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|