I have a particular fondness for Shadow Games. It is not only a terrific novel, but it was my
introduction to the work of Ed Gorman. The year was 2000. I made a habit of
studying and writing in a library not far from where I worked as a pizza
delivery driver; a job I won’t recommend, but a job that treated me well just
the same. My usual table was tucked at the back of the fiction stacks. I sat,
my back to the wall, facing a bookshelf packed with the latest genre titles
making study nearly impossible since the stories beckoned me.
There was one title that, day after day, caught my attention.
It was a mass market paperback, black background with orange-red print and the
large white Leisure Books logo—a publisher I miss badly—at the top of its spine.
Its title, Shadow Games. When I
finally relented and read Shadow Games,
sitting right there in the library, its tale of Hollywood ambition, perversion,
and lost potential, all told in a darkly humorous tone, made me a lifetime fan of
Ed Gorman’s work.
It is the story of Cobey Daniels, a child television star,
musician and, as the novel opens, the playwright and star of his own one man show.
The play is autobiographical and humorously recalls Cobey’s life as a fallen Hollywood
superstar. A life that has had more than a few public scandals. The most
serious involved a sixteen-year-old girl in a Miami, Florida mall causing Cobey’s
three-year stay in a Missouri mental hospital. But Cobey is better now, the
addictions and mood swings are behind him. Or so Cobey thinks until he awakens in
a Chicago apartment, difficulty remembering his name, a headless woman lying in
a pool of her own blood on the kitchen floor.
Shadow
Games is a dark ride across American pop culture—hero
worship, sex, vanity, dizzying unreality, hypocrisy, cynicism and downright
craziness. It is a crime novel at its center, but its view of Hollywood and its
fandom illuminates modern culture in a manner both convincing and familiar. It
is dark, possibly one of the three or four darkest tales I’ve read, but its humor—
“‘I
know a lot of people think I’m a goody-goody because of my role on the show.
Well, what’s wrong with being a clean-cut, all-American teenager?’
“Cobey
Daniels, interviewed in Teen Scene, August, 1984”
“(Reporter) The police are saying that you pulled a
knife on the waitress because she wouldn’t serve you liquor. Any comments?
“(Cobey) Yeah, just one. Why don’t you go f*ck off,
you asshole?
“Cobey
Daniels responding to KABC-TV reporter, May, 1985”
—lifts it from what, in lesser hands, could have been
a deeply depressing story to a very readable and damn good novel.
Shadow
Games, as it should be, is back in print with a high
quality trade paperback from Short, Scary Tales. It has been, from what I can
tell, lightly edited by the author and is titled Shadow Games and Other Sinister Stories of Show Business. It includes
four of Ed Gorman’s finest short stories, “Scream Queen,” “Riff,” “Such a Good
Girl,” and “Pards.” Do yourself a favor and buy it right now.
3 comments:
Ben, what a way to introduce yourself to Ed Gorman's work! I like the idea of putting aside my study books and reading one of Gorman's gripping novels.
I loved it. I think one of the worst things about being an adult with responsibilities (even though I was technically an adult then, too) is losing the spontaneity of youth. Boy, how I miss being able to spend a few hours in the library "studying."
I way past the "spontaneity of youth," Ben but here I am in the public library where I am every day it is open. And right now I'd be tempted to check the fiction shelves for Shadow Games, were it not for knowing our library has very few of Ed's fine writing. [note to self: I need to try to do something about this.]
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