Richard Laymon was unique voice in the horror genre.
His work was always entertaining, but never for the faint of heart. It
contained large doses of violence and sex often wrapped in a hard to define adolescent
naiveté. He won the Bram Stoker for his excellent novel The Traveling Vampire Show, and his work brought me back to the
horror genre fifteen years ago. My favorite of his novels are In the Dark, Night in the Lonesome October,
Island, and One Rainy Night.
“Laymon
always takes it to the max. No one writes like him and you’re going to have a
good time with anything he writes.” —Dean Koontz
“If
you’ve missed Laymon, you’ve missed a treat.” —Stephen King
“Laymon
is Stephen King without a conscience.” – Dan J. Marlowe
Amazon is running a Halloween sale on several of Mr. Laymon’s ebooks through the month of October: $1.99 each. Below below are three of my favorite titles included in the sale.
If you click the title of each novel you
will be whisked to its Amazon page.
Publisher’s
description: At 2:32 in the morning, a Jaguar roars
along a lonely road high in the California mountains. Behind the wheel sits a
beautiful woman wearing only a skimpy, revealing nightgown. She's left her
husband behind. She's after a different kind of man—someone as wild, daring,
and passionate as herself. The man she wants is waiting for her...with wild
plans of his own.
First
paragraph: When he heard the car, the man stood up. He brushed
pine needles off the seat of his jeans, then hurried out of the forest and
trotted down to the roadside. As he neared the moonlit pavement, headlights
swept around a corner to the south. They were very low and very close together.
Publisher’s
description: Neal has been carrying a gun in his car
lately—just to be safe. And it looks like it's a good thing he has. When he
spots a woman tied naked to a tree and a man ready to kill her, he has no
choice but to shoot the attacker. As a reward, the woman gives Neal something
unimaginable.
Neal's reward is a
bracelet. A very special bracelet. It enables its wearer to step inside other
people, to see through their eyes, to feel whatever they feel. To take
"body rides." But Neal has a big problem. The man he shot isn't dead.
And he wants revenge. First he's going to finish what he started with the
woman. Then he's going after Neal...
First
paragraph: Neal Darden, alone in his car, took back roads to
stay away from Robertson Boulevard. He wasn’t worried about too much traffic on
Robertson; he was worried about getting shot for no good reason.
Publisher’s
description: Vicki was the only one to stand up for
Melvin, but even she had to admit he'd gone too far when he dug up a body and
then tried to bring it back to life with the aid of a car battery. Years later,
and now released from a mental institution, Melvin is back and after Vicki - or
rather her body.
First paragraph: That had to be
Steve Kraft. It was Kraft’s blue Trans Am, the one his dad gave him when he
threw six touchdown passes against the Bay last fall. So that had to be
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