About This Title:
"This tale of a sadistic tracer of abducted children
who suffer loss of limbs and other cruel disfigurements is recommended only
for the strong of stomach." — Publishers Weekly
"This is a poignant cautionary thriller that grips
readers from the moment the hero is abducted and never slows down until the
final twist." — Midwest Book Review
Prodigal Blues
by Gary A. Braunbeck
From award-winning author Gary A. Braunbeck comes Prodigal Blues,
his first foray into non-supernatural horror.
After he finds himself stranded at a truck stop in Missouri, Mark Sieber gets
one of the biggest shocks of his life when he recognizes the face of a little
girl on a Missing poster as belonging to the same little girl he saw only a
few minutes before. Looking around for some sign of her, he comes back to his
table in the restaurant to find the little sitting there, waiting for him.
"I'm sorry, mister," is all she seems capable of saying.
As the police and media begin to converge on the truck stop, Mark retreats
back to his hotel room to call his wife and let her know what's going on, only
to be taken hostage by the same people who released the little girl. But his
abductors are little more than children themselves.
Ranging in ages from 12 to 19, Mark's abductors are in the process of escaping
from a sadistic pedophile known to them only as "Grendel" — a man
whose practices include torture and mutilation — specifically, mutilation of
the face.
Mark's abductors have all been mutilated by Grendel — who may be very close
behind them — and need someone with a "normal face" to help them
carry out their plan for justice and returning home.
For the next few days, Mark will come to understand not only the inhuman horror
that these children have suffered, but how they eventually learned to fight
back — and how they discovered that Grendel and his practices are at the center
of a very complex network catering to those who tastes run toward the molestation
and mutilation of children.
Prodigal Blues is perhaps Braunbeck's most suspenseful and emotionally
powerful work to date; a story of suffering, depravity, redemption, and — in
the end — the individual's compassion for his or her fellow human beings that
can lead some people to finding reserves of courage and determination they never
thought they possessed.
Terrifying, suspenseful, sometimes surprisingly funny, and ultimately moving,
Prodigal Blues is quintessential Braunbeck.
Advance Praise for Prodigal Blues by Gary A. Braunbeck:
"Gary A. Braunbeck centures into nonsupernatural horror terrority
with Prodigal Blues. This tale of a sadistic tracer of abducted children
who suffer loss of limbs and other cruel disfigurements is recommended only
for the strong of stomach."
— Publishers Weekly
"This is a poignant cautionary thriller that grips readers from the moment
the hero is abducted and never slows down until the final twist."
—Midwest Book Review
"5 stars...this is, by far, superior to anything and everything he's ever
done before. I will never look at a crying child the same again. Why does he
get a 5?... for making me wipe angry tears of distraught empathy off the visage
that had become statuesque in my fevered attempt to read, absorb, and become
part of the symphonic beauty that lies between the covers of Prodigal Blues."
—Horror-Web
"A toe-tapping tale of terror...Prodigal Blues is good enough that you
might feel scarred after reading it. But in the end, it is that good. And it
is really the first non-supernatural novel by Braunbeck, but one hopes not the
last. As ever, Cemetery Dance puts together a wonderful hardcover novel. Deena
Warner's illustrations are plentiful, dark and suggestive. They ratchet up the
level of disturbance and move the story but are tastefully rendered. Braunbeck's
been hitting the paperback racks with his novels of the supernatural, but there's
real potential for him to eke his way into the mainstream without ever really
becoming mainstream. No, Braubeck is definitely not mainstream fiction. He's
more like the big, solid rock that sits in the middle of the river. Always there.
Always strong."
— The Agony Column
"Prodigal Blues is a literary bonesaw, carving you to the core
and leaving you as emotionally exposed as the protagonist... It's simply the
best book you will read this year."
— Horror World
"Prodigal Blues is a disturbing novel. It deals with the most
vicious forms of abuse and molestation of the young. To describe in detail the
bare bones of what transpires to several youths in this novel would be excruciating.
And Gary does not flinch one bit from the horrors in it. Yet he imbues the story
with such tenderness that it is impossible to not feel a sense of joy. Prodigal
Blues demonstrates humankind's obstinate ability to maintain dignity, compassion
and even a sense of wit in even the most dire circumstances...Wiser folks than
I have called Gary Braunbeck the best writer of his generation and after reading
Prodigal Blues, I cannot argue that point."
— Horrordrive-In.com
"Braunbeck's prose flows like mercury blossoming across a marble floor:
it's mesmerizing and hypnotic, to the point you have no idea you're
even reading—you're just in the moment the whole time...this is
a damn near flawless book. Braunbeck hits you hard in the heart with this one."
— Creature-Corner.com
"Touching on love, friendship, horrors beyond imagining, with wonderful
illustrations by Deena Warner, Prodigal Blues brings us home, in the
end, to hope, and hope's really why we, as a species, open our weary eyes every
morning and plug on, isn't it?"
— The Horror Fiction Review
"Prodigal Blues is uncompromisingly brutal, brutally honest,
and quite honestly one of the most compelling and heart-rending novels I've
read in years. It tackles the most difficult of subjects with compassion
and sensitivity, and it is set to become an instant classic."
— Tim
Lebbon, author of Dusk and Berserk
"Expert storyteller Gary Braunbeck outdoes himself with Prodigal Blues,
a haunting, unsettling, eerie and beautiful novel about the hazards of childhood
in the face of overwhelming real-life horrors. Here is a tender, heart-felt,
unflinching exploration into shattered lives that will leave the reader disturbed,
enlightened, and with a real need to hug loved ones. Braunbeck is one of those
rare writers whose work can actually teach it audience a vast, human lesson."
— Tom Piccirilli, author of The Dead Letters and Headstone
City
Available in two states:
Limited
Edition of 1,000 signed copies ($40)
Traycased
Lettered Edition of 26 signed and lettered copies bound in leather, with a satin
ribbon page marker and additional full-color artwork ($175)
| Customer Reviews |
Add Your Review |
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    Amazing!
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03/24/2007 - by Emily Knies from St Michael, MN US
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This was an amazing book. The writing style was excellent and the story was very gripping. I would recommend to anyone that likes this style.
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    This one knocked me for a loop.
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03/01/2007 - by David F Mulligan from Cherry Hill, NJ US
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This was a powerful and disturbing book, dealing with a side of child abduction I'd never even thought about until now. There were parts where I would have looked away if it were a movie, but I couldn't stop reading despite the graphic imagery. I read it in one sitting and felt drained afterwards, but in a good way. The writing reminded me of Harlan Ellison in the way that it grabbed my attention and just wouldn't let go. Don't miss this book!
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    Prodigal Blues: Beauty, Brutality ... and Braunbeck!
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12/16/2006 - by John Claude Smith from Union City, CA US
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This is totally off the cuff, but that's just the way this novel hit me so ... let's go:
Just thought I should do this, because this novel rocks like you cannot believe. Gary A. Braunbeck's Prodigal Blues. I just read this book (I am on a reading binge which is so great as you all can imagine) and finished ... well, here's the lowdown. Ordered this book spur of the moment because I like what it seemed like it would be about and I had read something fairly recently (last couple month's) by Braunbeck that was damned good so ... getting to the apartment Friday eve, I pulled the book out and was just going to see how it starts and probably go to bed--but it did not let me. Locked in for 30-40 pages, did the same thing the following morning, and knocked out the final 200 + pages that evening and it's just damned smokin' stuff really, highly recommended, dealing with child abduction and mutilation (lovely themes, eh?!), but the undercurrent is one of hope and resiliency and it opens with a guy (Mark Sieber--I told you this was off the cuff, so just roll with it!) being kidnapped by a few of these mutilated kids and kind of drafted into helping them take care of business and get back to their families, etc., which he does, etc., and it's got some of THE grisliest, hardcore brutality imaginable, and, amidst this, it's got such beauty as well, it rips you twelve ways to Sunday and is an absolute stunner, rocks like a hurricane in your soul, baby, and has a bad guy, Grendel, who would put Hannibal the Cannibal to shame ... man, even in a scene toward the end in which Grendel is chained up and stuff, he still exerts a freaky kind of influence, power, it's a wild ride that rips along at a breakneck pace and, again, highly, highly recommended. Braunbeck's got serious chops and is firing on all cylinders with smooth, amusing, gritty efficiency. And more! Treat yourself to this one for Christmas (or anytime), if you like a story that moves and is unflinching and yet grabs your heart as well, by all means, it will fill the bill with a generous tip included and stick with your head well after finishing it (okay, so it's only the next day, but I'm tempted to pick it up and start over!).
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