Entries Tagged 'Horror' ↓

Vittorio the Vampire, by Anne Rice

Reviewed by: Slappy

Vittorio the VampireDelighted to be free of my constant torment from the Blind Monkey’s aversion to Mass Market publications, I of course jumped at the chance to review the newest novel by Anne Rice: Vittorio the Vampire. Now, from my Top Ten List you should be aware I love her writing anyway, so, the chance to get, once again, under Blind’s skin (or fur as it is) is just like gravy for the potatoes …

Vittorio. Oh Vittorio. Beautiful young country lord raised in elegance and fortune during the time of Cosimo de’ Medici who once was the most wealthy and renowned figure in Florence during the Italian Age of Gold, what can I say about you? Your life was regal and simple; your family very respected and honored among your subjects. That is, until the night your father refused to meet an ages old bargain with an enchanting band of vampires known as the Court of the Ruby Grail. Your sister and brother, slaughtered before your eyes, very nearly while in your arms; your life and home defiled and desecrated by your tormentors, this Court of the Ruby Grail.

Yet, you are overcome with passion and desire for Ursula, the reigning Queen of this unholy Court. Your story, as you write it, is tragic and passionate, full of young love and innocence lost. And your revenge for these evils brought to you is justice at it’s core.

That is, of course, until you are brought over by Ursula …

Hardcover – 304 pages (March 16, 1999)

Exquisite Corpse, by Poppy Z. Brite

Reviewed by: Slappy

Exquisite CorpseWhen the Blind Monkey asked me to pick a favorite love story of mine to review for the Valentine’s Day issue of BMR, I bored for days on which book to choose. And, as you have come to know, Slappy has some rather arcane tastes. So, here is my review, my opinion, of Poppy Z. Brite’s Exquisite Corpse.

Set mainly in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Exquisite Corpse is at it’s most, a love story and at it’s least, a love story. I know that may sound repetitive, but the one recurring theme in this book is love. Oh, and evisceration and mutilation. Did I mention the main romantic characters are both serial killers? One from England and the other, old money New Orleans? These two, Andrew Compton and Jay Byrne, haphazardly find each other amongst the waifs and lost children of the New Orleans French Quarter. Both with a penchant for perverse desires, they seem a more than likely match. But watch out! This is not your normal serial killer fall in love story! Andrew and Jay are competitors, also. Both wanting the possession of one young Vietnamese boy, Tran, whom they name the perfect victim.

Andrew and Jay consider murder an art. The most intimate art. And Brite does not hold any qualms about graphically depicting their forays into “artistic expression”. She has successfully blended splatterpunk horror (this monkey’s favorite kind of gore-riddled fiction) with what eventually boils down to an old fashioned, boy meets boy love story. Brite has “dissect(ed) the landscape of torture and invite(s) us into the mind(s) of killer(s)”.

Known for her ability to tell a story, heartbreakingly real characters and perfect, if not too perfect descriptive writing, Poppy Z. Brite has penned what I believe is the most amazing and startlingly frightening love story of this decade. Exquisite Corpse is not a book that would even hope to score on the Blind Monkey’s Mom-o-Meter; hell, it blew the meter all to pieces. But, for those of you with more enigmatic imaginations, Exquisite Corpse will not disappoint.

Hardcover – 240 pages Reprint edition (August 1996) Scribner; ISBN: 0684836270 ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.61 x 8.04 x 5.26