opffile.blogg.se

The traveling vampire show
The traveling vampire show








Still, the abruptness of the ending doesn't detract from an otherwise compelling and engaging story. A rather shocking event takes place, and then the narrator simply ties up loose ends. The ending is good - satisfactory, no loose ends - but it switched quickly from a fast pace to a sort of passivity. The ending - without revealing anything here - was abrupt, as if Laymon tired of writing this story and just wanted to offer a resolution.

the traveling vampire show

A few red herrings are tossed into the fray - the thing that may or may not live beneath Janks Field, or why Janks the person was introduced in the first place, giving the reader the suggestion that something supernatural might evolve with this character or why the theme of unusual dog patterns of behavior was introduced but never fully explored. The story is told chronologically, in first person narrated by Dwight, which adds to its immediacy and makes for an exciting story. Rusty rounds out the trio as the more stock character, the overweight, selfish and cowardly teen. The focus of the story is 16 year-old Dwight, and the heart of the novel is in its characters, in Laymon's realistic depiction of a horny teenage boy, and his crush on his girl friend Slim, who changes her name every time she reads a new novel. The Traveling Vampire Show is the story of three teenage friends and their one-day adventure revolving around - what else? - a traveling Vampire show. The Traveling Vampire Show is also one of his tamer novels - certainly there was nothing graphically disturbing about it - but since reading it, I've managed to locate at least six other Laymon titles, and I look forward to reading them in the same enthusiastic fashion that I read The Traveling Vampire Show.

the traveling vampire show the traveling vampire show

I'd just discovered his work and then began to hear the controversy - how his graphic novels were perhaps a bit too graphic, that they were, for many, profoundly disturbing, almost humorous in a winking, let's-share-a-secret sort of way. The Traveling Vampire Show was my first Laymon novel, surprisingly enough.










The traveling vampire show