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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Review from Baton Rouge ADVOCATE Newspaper,
By A Customer
This review is from: Skimming the Gumbo Nuclear (Paperback)
Laissez les Mal Temps Roulez: A Review of Skimming the Gumbo Nuclear, M. F. KornThe great Louisiana hayride was definitively over at the beginning of the 1980s, when the oil boom ground to a halt, and state coffers ran dry. Once, a high school diploma was all that was needed to land a well-paying job in the oil field. Now, even a college degree is no longer a guarantee of a middle class existence. And for many, the sprawling petrochemical industries lining the river between Baton Rouge and New Orleans are the catalysts in this economic and social de-evolution.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Various Reviews about this book,
By Ms. Olaf Stapledon, Jr "Jane's Bertie Wells" (A flat in the Honduras) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Skimming the Gumbo Nuclear (Paperback)
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About THE AUTHOR of twelve novels and 240 published stories: Three of MF Korn's books, CONFESSIONS OF A GHOUL AND OTHER STORIES, and ALIENS, MINIBIKES AND OTHER STAPLES OF SUBURBIA, and also SKIMMING THE GUMBO NUCLEAR were mentioned in The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror: Fifteenth Annual Collection. CONFESSIONS OF A GHOUL AND OTHER STORIES was mentioned in The Mammoth Book Of Best New Horror edited by Stephen Jones. RACHMANINOFF'S GHOST was also mentioned in The Mammoth Book Of Best New Horror edited the following year. ---------------------------------------------------------- Reviews below: --------------------------------------------------------- Review from Amazing Authors Showcase Reviews Definitely not for the average reader! This colorful tale of the author's view of a plague caused by man and pollution was a challenge in itself. It is truly a good fit to the audience that it was written for. The publisher, Eraserhead Press, claims to create a new genre for "bizarre" literature. This author is definitely a rebel of the written word and has done his part in the fight to tear down convention and create a new era in alternative literature. Our hero matches his creator's accomplishments in rebelling against what was expected all along the way. His unconventional attitudes, not to mention his very lively vocabulary, even in his thought processes, certainly added to the bizarre-ness quotient in this tome. The ending, although predictable, occurs at the same spurt of breakneck speed that happens sporadically throughout the work. In that final moment, he mutates from the aimless, chemically-stimulated "college boy" into a hero that saves what is left of the wasted landscape and day. This is not a light read or something that you would want to take to the beach. This book would be better read when the mood is more philosophical and the intensity dial is set to high. Review by JoElla Lukehart Review from Nacho Cheese and Anarchy: It's the apocalypse. It's the end of the world. It's the all out downfall of society and humanity as we know it. And I couldn't be more pleased. Maybe it was the great R.E.M. song that said "It's the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine" that makes me think of this book. Finally, someone is able to toy with the fact that we- as humans- are slowly destroying ourselves. And while at times it may seem a bit too slow, the process does eventually speed up and it will eventually catch up with us. The only problem is most people think it won't catch up with them in their lifetime. Well, what if it does? What if this all catches up with you in your lifetime? What if the death of you- one person- not only becomes just that, but also the death of every living thing? It's something I'm sure we all have pondered. And as M.F. Korn takes us through these pages filled with the eventual end of mankind, I can't help but get a happy feeling from it all (though I shouldn't) and reassurance in knowing that I'm not the only one contemplating the end. Not just the end of my life and my time, but the end of all life and of all time.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Sloppy not so bizarre,
By Dying in August "Junkie" (Houston, TX USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Skimming the Gumbo Nuclear (Paperback)
This is the first book I have read by this author and I have heard great things about him. This book however was sloppy. There were so many typos it made it hard to read. There is even a typo on the back cover. The language was interesting, but just when you got into the flow of it there was another typo. Hopefully some of his other books are better and hopefully all the typos were not intentional. I ordered All the Mutant Trash and will read it and give this author another chance, because there was alot of potential in this book.
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