Night of the Mannequins
マネキンや匿名性をモチーフにした中編。都市の歪んだ風景と暴力性を通じて、恐怖と社会的不安を描写する作品。
作品情報
ひとつの悪ふざけが、取り返しのつかない恐怖へ変わる。
Stephen Graham Jonesによる中編ホラー。たわいない遊びのはずだった出来事が、変化と暴力の物語へ転がっていく。
レビュー要約
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十代の悪ふざけが崩れていく過程を、短い分量で鋭く切り取る点が高く評価されている。変化と友情の不穏な感触を残す、スラッシャー的な恐怖が強い。
書籍情報
- 出版社
- Tor.com
- 発売日
- 2020-09-01
- ページ数
- 136ページ
- 言語
- 英語
- サイズ
- 12.7 x 0.81 x 20.32 cm
- ISBN-13
- 9781250752079
- ISBN-10
- 1250752078
- 価格
- 2301 JPY
- カテゴリ
- 洋書/Literature & Fiction/Genre Fiction/Horror
One last laugh for the summer as it winds down. One last prank just to scare a friend. Bringing a mannequin into a theatre is just some harmless fun, right? Until it wakes up. Until it starts killing. Luckily, Sawyer has a plan. He’ll be a hero. He'll save everyone to the best of his ability. He'll kill as many people as he needs to so he can save the day. That's the thing about heroes - sometimes you have to become a monster first.
Stephen Graham Jones was raised as pretty much the only Blackfeet in West Texas-except for his dad and grandma and aunts and uncles and cousins. He now lives in Boulder, Colorado with his wife, a couple kids, and too many old trucks. Between West Texas and now, he's had seventeen novels and six story collections published. Most recent, from William Morrow, is the werewolf novel Mongrels. Stephen teaches in the MFA programs at CU Boulder and UCR-PD.
レビュー
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Estuvo bien, no es lo que esperaba, pero si tiene unas partes muy buenas. Aunque tiene una buena analogia sobre desprenderse del pasado.
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Rating: 4/5 stars Would I read it again? Probably not. I don’t think I’d gain any more insight reading it again, and it wasn’t something I’d be dying to revisit in the years to come, but it was enjoyable and short enough that if a friend asked me to reread it, I wouldn’t be opposed to it. Would I recommend it? Yes. I would definitely recommend it. It’s fun, it’s not too long; it was the perfect vacation read for me. This was my first read by Stephen Graham Jones and I’ve gotta say I’m impressed. Night of the Living Mannequin was a fun, easy read and perfect for fans who like both serious and humorous psychological horror. I’ll definitely be picking up more of Stephen’s work in the near future. *SPOILERS BELOW* First, I’ll get into what I liked. I don’t know if it was supposed to be implied that the narrator and main character of the novel, Sawyer, had ADHD, but as someone with ADHD myself I found his tone of voice incredibly relatable. The way he spoke in run-on sentences and went off on unrelated tangents was almost like reading a transcript of the way my own brain thinks, and the diction Sawyer used was very accurate for his age; I never felt like the writing was an adult-writing-a-teenager, it felt more like listening to my own teenage-self rambling away. Stephen did an amazing job writing a protagonist/antagonist that was both relatable and likeable to the point that you almost didn’t hate him for the things he was doing. Like, yea he was killing all his friends one by one, but he was sincere and at times funny and really believed he was doing it for a good cause. Stephen managed to write a teenage serial killer you couldn’t hate, so hats off to him for that. Now, inevitably onto the things I wasn’t thrilled about. First and foremost, this book wasn’t what I thought it would be going into it based on the cover and description- which isn’t necessarily a bad thing, it just means that it could benefit from a clearer description or perhaps even a more apt title. Going in, I thought it would be reminiscent of the 1979 film Tourist Trap, a fun horror piece about a group of teenagers trapped and picked off over the course of the night seemingly by the mannequins around them. That is not what this novella was, which again: not a bad thing, it just left me a little disappointed that it wasn’t what I thought it’d be. Also, there’s a part near the very end where a character thought to be dead reappears, and her reappearance doesn’t really make sense to me. When she showed up I wasn’t sure if she was real, or a part of Sawyer’s imagination, or whatever else, but it definitely took me out of the climax for a moment, and so close to the end. This last point is just a personal pet peeve and has no reflection on the quality of the writing itself, but the ending was very vague and open ended, which is my absolute least favorite kind of ending cause I like to know what happens. Was Sawyer caught? Was giant Manny actually real? What was Shanna talking about when she wanted to show Sawyer something? None of these questions are answered in the end and I found that to be incredibly frustrating. The ending itself was wonderfully written at least, so I can’t say I hate it, but man do I just have so many questions left!!
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I'd heard good things about this novella. I thought it would be a good way to fill an afternoon, but it took me much longer to read it than I thought. Why? I couldn't handle it. I read a lot of horror but this after a certain point had me filled with anxiety. Very few books have that effect on me. In other words, this is very good horror.
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The writing, the characters, I loved it. I don’t want to give away the plot too much here. Suffice to say that it’s an experience living in the mind of the main character as thinks through the happenings and comes up with his own twisted logic...
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I really want to like Stephen Graham Jones. I’ve read some fantastic reviews on his work but I just really cannot get into his novels. I persevered with this one as it’s only a short read but I found it to be a let down and a little incoherent. The man is clearly very imaginative and talented which he deserves credit but his writing style is not for me sadly.
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