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    Blood Crazy by Simon Clark

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    (Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

    • Pub. Date: January 2001
    • 400pp
    • Sales Rank: 132,809

      Reader Rating: (12 ratings)

      Detailed Rating: "Thrilling" See All

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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: January 2001
      • Publisher: Leisure Books
      • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 400pp
      • Sales Rank: 132,809

      Synopsis

      Saturday is a normal day. People go shopping. To the movies. Everything is just as it should be. But not for long. By Sunday, civilization is in ruins. Adults have become murderously insane. One by one they become infected with a crazed, uncontrollable urge to slaughter the young—even their own children. Especially their own children.

      Will this be the way the world ends, in waves of madness and carnage? What will be left of our world as we know it? And who, if anyone, will survive? Terror follows terror in this apocalyptic nightmare vision by one of the most powerful talents in modern horror fiction. Prepare yourself for mankind’s final days of fear.

      Publishers Weekly

      Published in January as a mass market paperback, this crude generation-gap shocker from British author Clark (Darkness Demands) will thrill the adolescent audience for which it's unashamedly intended. A wild premise on a "Saturday night in April, every adult human being on this planet" goes mad and begins murdering everyone under 19 ensures almost constant action. Those kids lucky enough to escape their insane, zombie-like elders, labeled "creosotes" or "kaybees" for "crazy bastards," gather in communes in an obvious nod to Golding's The Lord of the Flies. After finding his brother dismembered by their parents, narrator Nick Aten (rhymes with Satan) observes, "adults seem to be actually afraid of their children...whom they feel compelled to destroy before we destroy them." Nick's theory is later confirmed at story-stopping length by another character, who explains the killings in Jungian evolutionary terms. Clark keeps the sex and violence relatively restrained. At one point, as part of "a sadistic new sport called Carrying the Can," Nick crosses an icy river by walking over the heads of a living bridge of standing creosotes. Finally and predictably, Nick faces a deadly confrontation with his relentlessly pursuing father and mother. Rebellious teenagers will enjoy the vicarious revenge on their parents, but the more sophisticated would do better to read Jung. (Sept.) Forecast: Despite this novel's weaknesses, Clark is a rising star in the horror field, and his fans will ensure a sell-out for this deluxe hardcover edition. Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

      Customer Reviews

      Truly terrifying and thought provokingby SableT

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      April 18, 2009: I was glued to this book. It was frightening with its carnage and brutal, murderous adults. It was thought provoking in the ideology and approach to theology by the post-apocolyptic teens and young adult heroes. The struggle to survive and rebuild civilization...you have to read this book!

      The standardby Anonymous

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      January 10, 2008: Ever since I read this book, every horror or thriller book I read is compared to it. Few have stood up in comparison. I literally could not put this book down. I stayed up all night reading, went to work, and was up the next night reading. Madness, right? Well, every time you figure out where this book might be going, it goes in a different way. I love that. The premise is promising: anyone over 18 goes 'nuts' and they kill children, especially their own. What I loved most: the resolution was plausible and well-written. I did not feel let down like with so many other end-of-the-world books.


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