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Loading... The Devil You Know (edition 2003)by Poppy Z. Brite (Author)
Work InformationThe Devil You Know by Poppy Z. Brite
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. A little strange, but still a good read. ( ) Several of my friends mentioned loving Brite's work in their teens, so when I came across this book in the local Oxfam bookshop I thought I'd give it ago. Sad to say I was a little disappointed. I found the characters flat and the plots simplistic. There was nothing technically wrong with the writing, but it felt lacking. Characterisation consited of more tell than show, while many of the stories were predictable. And the stories about Dr Brite just made me uncomfortable, unfortunately. Maybe her novels are better, I don't know. I don't exactly feel compelled to try them after reading this collection, though. Sometimes, as a reader, there will be times when I want to drop myself into an immersive world full of well-written characters with a long story that will keep me occupied for days. Other times, feeling less interested in universes and plot intricacies, I find myself looking for a good short story collection to keep me entertained in smaller, much more manageable bites. [Full Review] http://alookatabook.blogspot.com/2009/12/29-of-2009-devil-you-know-by-poppy-z.ht... no reviews | add a review
In her third short story collection, Poppy Z. Brite finds fresh ways of exploring territory both familiar and strange. Here you'll meet the Devil and his giant cat last seen in the pages of Bulgakov, the gourmand coroner of New Orleans, the mad-genius chef who can't stand to have his cheese list criticized, and an assortment of Crescent City characters who also appear in Brite's novels The Value of X and Liquor. First and foremost, Poppy Z. Brite is a New Orleans writer. Dissatisfied with much of her early work about her home city, she has begun to explore a way of writing about it that bypasses the cliches and approaches the city's true heart: the hard-working, hard-partying cooks; the ways in which race, class, and sexual orientation do and don't matter; the love of bottom feeders, be they crustaceans or politicos; the million little juxtapositions of sacred and profane, bizarre and mundane, sublime and ridiculous that make up the everyday life of New Orleans. Some of these stories are set elsewhere, but Brite always returns home in the end. Brite's short fiction has been praised by a diverse assortment of writers: Harlan Ellison, Peter Straub, Neil Gaiman, Dan Simmons, Dennis Cooper, Andrei Codrescu. In this collection you'll find her strongest work yet. Book jacket. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813Literature American literature in English American fiction in EnglishLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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