The Horror Show by Greg Kihn

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(Mass Market Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: October 1997
  • 274pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 1997
    • Publisher: Doherty, Tom Associates, LLC
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 274pp

    Synopsis

    When Monster Magazine reported Clint Stockbern sets out to interview the legendary fifties horror movie director Landis Woodley, he finds a reclusive, forgotten, and bitter old man. Worming his way through the door of the Scotch-drinking, cigar-smoking filmmaker's home, Stockbern finds a treasure trove of B-movie memorabilia. Playing to the movie genius's ego, Stockbern does his best to dig up a few good anecdotes from the past--but what he uncovers is a story of real-life horror!

    Flashback to 1957 Hollywood, where Landi Woodley is getting ready to shoot his latest movie, Cadaver, set in a real-life L.A. morgue. He is also bent on throwing the ultimate Halloween party. Attendee will include Lucifer-obsessed anthropologist Albert Beaumond and Devila, the celebrated TV horrow-show hostess. Even Satan himself may put in an appearance. And when cheap special effects are replaced by real corpses, a deadly curse may windup taking its toll on all these foolish enough to become involved with the filming of the cult movie classic, Cadaver.

    VOYA

    This novel starts off as a basic Stephen King type modern horror drama, but gets better and better as it gets stranger and stranger. It opens in 1996 as Clint, a young writer for Monster Magazine, seeks out an interview with Landis Woodley, a bitter reclusive horror filmmaker from the 1950s who "...makes Ed Wood look like Kirosawa." Clint gets his interview, and asks Woodley if the rumor that his horror masterpiece, Cadaver, was made using real corpses. The action jumps back to 1957 when young Woodley, his low budget creature maker Buzzy, and his cross-dressing scriptwriter Neil are preparing to make Cadaver. Their stars are a heroin-addicted stage actor and a young matinee idol whose best screen feature is his hair. With no budget to build sets, they are given permission to film in the Los Angeles County Morgue in the dead of night. They only have two extras to play the hordes of zombies that they need for the film, so Buzzy suggests using the corpses already in the morgue, manipulating them like marionettes for the close-ups. The stunt is successful, producing some of the best and goriest effects in film making of that era, including a shot of maggots crawling out of the dead man's eyes! The problem arises when the "John Doe" corpse they used turns out to be a Satanist preacher who had stolen an instrument used to call up a snake-like demon and used it on himself. The instrument winds up in the hands of "Devila," a campy horror show hostess on television. Devila shows the power of the demon to Landis Woodley, who films an actual appearance. Jump back to 1996, and Clint discovers that everyone associated with the making of Cadaver had died under mysterious circumstances, except Landis Woodley. He learns about the demon, and returns to the filmmaker's home to catch a picture of it. It is the last thing he does. The action is interwoven with bits of outrageous humor, including a Hollywood Halloween party, Buddy's theft of the corpse, and the private lives of all these strange characters. The pace is fast, the interest never lags, and this novel is original enough to enchant readers sick of Stephen King and Clive Barker. A terrific first novel for horror fans, and I hope there are many more to come. Editor's Note: YA readers may know the author as a famous rock musician since the 1970s; his Greg Kihn Band still plays occasionally with his son Ry as lead guitarist. A music CD sharing the novel's title was released simultaneously. Kihn claims his book got published because "I placed it on Edgar Allan Poe's grave for about thirty minutes... to vibe it up"-horror trivia for your readers. VOYA Codes: 4Q 4P S (Better than most, marred only by occasional lapses, Broad general YA appeal, and Senior High-defined as grades 10 to 12).

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    Biography

    Greg Kihn was a pop star in the eighties. Greg enjoyed heavy rotation on MTV with two hit songs: "Jeopardy" and "The Breakup Song." He lives in San Francisco, California.

    Customer Reviews

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    Horror Showby Anonymous

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    August 15, 2003: i love this book!! when i first picked it up, i had no idea who the writer was. i was simply going by what i read on the back of the book. but as soon as i started reading it, i was hooked!! it just kept getting better and better as the story went on. i love horror and this book is just what i was thirsting for...