5/22/2023 0 Comments The drive in joe lansdale![]() ![]() He’s so irresistible because every time you immerse yourself into a new Lansdale yarn, you know you’re going to be transported into his own fascinatingly peculiar tone, that easy drawl, whether it’s embedded in a sweaty east-Texas crime yarn, or thrumming inside a supernatural western, or serving a high-flying fantasy filled with talking apes and militarized dirigibles. What’s that you say? You’ve never read him? Say it ain’t so! At any rate, you’re in luck, because Moon Lake is just coming out, and it’s pretty representative of his stuff. He’s been knocking them out of the park for forty years, and now he’s one of the most decorated crime writers in history, with such memorable and legendary titles as Mucho Mojo, the Hap and Leonard series, The Magic Wagon, Freezer Burn, The Bottoms, not to mention scads of sharply observed short stories. You should see my library shelves today: They hold an awesome assortment of Lansdale’s work, which now spans not only genres but also decades. After those outrageous cult classics, I was hooked for life. Later, working for a bookstore in southern California in the early nineties, I discovered (and devoured) his down-n-dirty paperbacks Cold in July, Savage Season, and, of course, The Drive-In 1 and The Drive-In 2. ![]() I remember picking up his groundbreaking weird western Dead in the West at a Fangoria Weekend of Horrors around 1986, and that wasn’t long after he burst onto the scene with his brutal horror novel Act of Love. Lansdale fan since … well, not quite the beginning of his career, but pretty close. ![]()
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