Book 1 of John Dies at the End
Language: English
American Horror Fiction Classic horror & ghost stories Epic Fantasy Fantasy - Epic Fiction Fiction - Horror Friends Horror Horror & Ghost Stories Horror - General Horror Fiction Horror Tales Humorous Humorous Fiction Humorous Stories Library - Science Fiction and Fantasy Novel Science Fiction Thrillers _isfdb
Publisher: Permuted Press
Published: Sep 2, 2007
Description:
From Publishers Weekly
In this reissue of an Internet phenomenon originally slapped between two covers in 2007 by indie Permutus Press, Wong—Cracked.com editor Jason Pargin's alter ego—adroitly spoofs the horror genre while simultaneously offering up a genuinely horrifying story. The terror is rooted in a substance known as soy sauce, a paranormal psychoactive that opens video store clerk Wong's—and his penis-obsessed friend John's—minds to higher levels of consciousness. Or is it just hell seeping into the unnamed Midwestern town where Wong and the others live? Meat monsters, wig-wearing scorpion aberrations and wingless white flies that burrow into human skin threaten to kill Wong and his crew before infesting the rest of the world. A multidimensional plot unfolds as the unlikely heroes drink lots of beer and battle the paradoxes of time and space, as well as the clichés of first-person-shooter video games and fantasy gore films. Sure to please the Fangoria set while appealing to a wider audience, the book's smart take on fear manages to tap into readers' existential dread on one page, then have them laughing the next. (Oct.)
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Review
Praise for John Dies at the End:
"_John Dies at the End_…[is] a case of the author trying to depict actual, soul-sucking lunacy, and succeeding with flying colors." –_Fangoria _
“David Wong is like a mash-up of Douglas Adams and Stephen King . . . ‘page-turner’ is an understatement.” --Don Coscarelli, director, Phantasm I–_V _and Bubba Ho-tep
“David Wong has managed to write that rarest of things---a genuinely scary story.” --David Wellington, author of Monster_ Island_ and_ Vampire Zero_
"The rare genre novel that manages to keep its sense of humor strong without ever diminishing the scares." --_The Onion AV Club _
“Sure to please the Fangoria set while appealing to a wider audience, the book's smart take on fear manages to tap into readers' existential dread on one page, then have them laughing the next.” –_Publishers Weekly _