About this item
Highlights
- DIE ONCE--DIE TWICE The opening sentence of "I Had Sex with a Martian" warns its readers, "If you are at all shocked by startling unconventionality and descriptions of male sexual members, do not read my story.
- Author(s): Gil Brewer
- 204 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Mystery & Detective
Description
About the Book
Following the success of Redheads Die Quickly and Death is a Private Eye, Rachels has assembled another essential noir collection, 24 previously unpublished stories from "one of the best pulpsters around," including some of his erotic fiction.Book Synopsis
DIE ONCE--DIE TWICE
The opening sentence of "I Had Sex with a Martian" warns its readers, "If you are at all shocked by startling unconventionality and descriptions of male sexual members, do not read my story."
Here are 24 previously unpublished stories from the noir master, Gil Brewer. Beyond the fact that Brewer wrote outstanding short stories, an important reason to read his shorter works is artistic freedom. Brewer's obsessive theme was the destructive power of human sexuality, and he had greater freedom to explore this literary terrain in magazines than books.
But the stories in this collection exist for more than their sexual content (nor do they all have explicit content). They represent a range of noirish responses to the literary marketplace of the 1970s, when Brewer was casting about and targeting publications ranging from Boys' Life to Hustler. These 24 stories are by turns artistic and vulgar, enjoyable and off putting, accessible and challenging. Together, they form a fascinating final chapter in Gil Brewer's career as a story writer.
Review Quotes
"Brewer masterfully hooks readers with the opening sentence of each story. Once hooked it is nearly impossible not to continue reading."--Alan Cranis, Bookgasm
"Never one for dull moments, Brewer wastes no time grabbing his readers, pulling them right into the thick of a seedy, titillating plot, and keeping up an exhilarating pace from climax through conclusion."--The Florida Bookshelf
"Brewer's stories linger in the reader's mind like extreme public indecency." --Los Angeles Review of Books