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Prodigal Blues [Deluxe Edition] [Hardcover]

Gary A. Braunbeck (Author), Deena Warner (Painter)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 30, 2006
From award-winning author Gary A. Braunbeck comes Prodigal Blues, his first foray into non-supernatural horror.

After he finds himself stranded at a truck stop in Missouri, Mark Sieber gets one of the biggest shocks of his life when he recognizes the face of a little girl on a Missing poster as belonging to the same little girl he saw only a few minutes before. Looking around for some sign of her, he comes back to his table in the restaurant to find the little sitting there, waiting for him.

"I'm sorry, mister," is all she seems capable of saying.

As the police and media begin to converge on the truck stop, Mark retreats back to his hotel room to call his wife and let her know what's going on, only to be taken hostage by the same people who released the little girl. But his abductors are little more than children themselves.

Ranging in ages from 12 to 19, Mark's abductors are in the process of escaping from a sadistic pedophile known to them only as "Grendel" a man whose practices include torture and mutilation specifically, mutilation of the face.

Mark's abductors have all been mutilated by Grendel who may be very close behind them and need someone with a "normal face" to help them carry out their plan for justice and returning home.

For the next few days, Mark will come to understand not only the inhuman horror that these children have suffered, but how they eventually learned to fight back and how they discovered that Grendel and his practices are at the center of a very complex network catering to those who tastes run toward the molestation and mutilation of children.

Prodigal Blues is perhaps Braunbeck's most suspenseful and emotionally powerful work to date; a story of suffering, depravity, redemption, and in the end the individual's compassion for his or her fellow human beings that can lead some people to finding reserves of courage and determination they never thought they possessed.

Terrifying, suspenseful, sometimes surprisingly funny, and ultimately moving, Prodigal Blues is quintessential Braunbeck.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Gary A. Braunbeck centures into nonsupernatural horror terrority with Prodigal Blues. This tale of a sadistic tracer of abducted children who suffer loss of limbs and other cruel disfigurements is recommended only for the strong of stomach. --Publishers Weekly

This is a poignant cautionary thriller that grips readers from the moment the hero is abducted and never slows down until the final twist. --Midwest Book Review

5 stars...this is, by far, superior to anything and everything he's ever done before. I will never look at a crying child the same again. Why does he get a 5?... for making me wipe angry tears of distraught empathy off the visage that had become statuesque in my fevered attempt to read, absorb, and become part of the symphonic beauty that lies between the covers of Prodigal Blues. --Horror-Web

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Cemetery Dance Publications; 1st edition (November 30, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1587671093
  • ISBN-13: 978-1587671098
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,577,775 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Gary A. Braunbeck is a prolific author who writes mysteries, thrillers, science fiction, fantasy, horror, and mainstream literature. He is the author of 20 books -- evenly divided between novels and short-story collections; his fiction has been translated into Japanese, French, Italian, Russian, German, Czech, and Polish. Nearly 200 of his short stories have appeared in various publications.

He was born in Newark, Ohio; the city that serves as the model for the fictitious Cedar Hill in many of his novels and stories. The Cedar Hill stories are collected in Graveyard People, Home Before Dark, and the forthcoming The Carnival Within, all published by Earthling Books.

His fiction has received several awards, including 5 Bram Stoker Awards: the first for Superior Achievement in Short Fiction in 2003 for "Duty"; the second -- also for Superior Achievement in Short Story -- in 2005 for "We Now Pause for Station Identification"; his collection Destinations Unknown won the Stoker for Superior Achievement in Fiction Collection in 2006; and 2007 saw Gary winning 2 Stoker Awards; the first for co-editing the anthology 5 Strokes to Midnight, and the second for his novella "Afterward, There Will Be a Hallway." His novella "Kiss of the Mudman" received the International Horror Guild Award for Long Fiction in 2005.

As an editor, Gary completed the latest installment of the Masques anthology series created by Jerry Williamson, Masques V, after Jerry became too ill to continue.

He also served a term as president of the Horror Writers Association. He is married to Lucy Snyder, a science fiction/fantasy writer, and they reside together in Columbus, Ohio.

Gary is an adjunct professor at Seton Hill University, Pennsylvania, where he teaches in an innovative MFA program in Writing Popular Fiction.

His nonfiction writing book Fear In A Handful Of Dust: Horror As A Way Of Life has been used as a text by several college writing classes. (A revised and expanded edition of the book will be coming out in late 2010/early 2011, from Apex Books.) Gary has taught writing seminars and workshops around the country on topics such as short story writing, characterization, and dialogue.

His work is often praised for its depth of emotion and characterization, as well as for its refusal to adhere to any genre tropes; some joke that the term "cross-genre fiction" may have been invented to describe his work -- a rumor he does everything in his power to propagate.

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars EXCELLENT, July 7, 2009
This review is from: Prodigal Blues (Hardcover)
I have read many of Gary A. Braunbeck's books and I can honestly say that I am AMAZED every time I read his works!! I call them works because calling them books doesn't do them justice. I was transfixed from very early on and stayed that way until the book was finished. Then I was disappointed the book was read!!! Gary continues to amaze me with every book I read. The story lines are cool as all get out and I am simply amazed at his abilities and imagination!!! I hope that he continues to write, I would be disappointed not to have more works to look forward to!!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not sure how he did it, June 1, 2009
By 
m.r.fruits (Philadelphia, PA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Prodigal Blues (Hardcover)
This is the first thing I have read by Braunbeck, and I have to say I was pleasantly surprised. This sat on my wishlist forever, and I finally broke down and bought it because it was about to go out of print. I honestly expected the book to be sensationalistic trash given its topic, but to the author's credit he managed to tell the story in as sensitive a way as one possibley could. I am super impressed that he managed to pull that off. It was a fast paced and engaging read. My only real complaint is that I found the narrators ruminations on the power puff girls to be really distracting and out of place. Other than that, it was a good book. I daresay the finest book I've ever seen on the theme of mutilatization and sexual torture of children. How's that for an endorsement?
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beauty, Brutality ... and Braunbeck!, December 10, 2007
This review is from: Prodigal Blues (Hardcover)
I cannot believe this book has no reviews, it's such an amazing, powerful work. I wrote a review right after I read it last year, off the cuff, so here goes that review:

Just thought I should do this, because this novel rocks like you cannot believe. Gary A. Braunbeck's Prodigal Blues. I just read this book (I am on a reading binge which is so great as you all can imagine) and finished ... well, here's the lowdown. Ordered this book spur of the moment because I like what it seemed like it would be about and I had read something fairly recently by Braunbeck that was damned good so ... getting to the apartment Friday eve, I pulled the book out and was just going to see how it starts--but it did not let me stop at that. Locked in for 30-40 pages, did the same thing the following morning, and knocked out the final 200 + pages that evening and it's just damned smokin' stuff really, highly recommended, dealing with child abduction and mutilation (lovely themes, eh?!), but the undercurrent is one of hope and resiliency and it opens with a guy (Mark Sieber--I told you this was off the cuff, so just roll with it!) being kidnapped by a few of these mutilated kids and kind of drafted into helping them take care of business and get back to their families, etc., which he does, etc., and it's got some of THE grisliest, hardcore brutality imaginable, and, amidst this, it's got such beauty as well, it rips you twelve ways to Sunday and is an absolute stunner, rocks like a hurricane in your soul, baby, and has a bad guy, Grendel, who would put Hannibal the Cannibal to shame ... man, even in a scene toward the end in which Grendel is chained up and stuff, he still exerts a freaky kind of influence, power, it's a wild ride that rips along at a breakneck pace and, again, highly, highly recommended. Braunbeck's got serious chops and is firing on all cylinders with smooth, amusing, gritty efficiency. And more!

Again, Highly Recommended!

JCS
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