![]() ![]() He slowly integrates himself into their crowd, all the while gaining more and more teen outcasts as cult-like followers of himself and his mysterious, sinister cause, one that will culminate in an underground (literally underground) rock concert he plans to put on. It tells the story of a group of typical jaded high-schoolers in the San Fernando Valley area of California, and the new guy in town, Mace, who's several years older, cool, and who seems just about perfect in every way. It's also just-plain-fun to read, and the action rarely lets up for a 400-page novel. All that only adds flavor to the novel, imo, instead of detracts. The author does a great job of making the reader feel as if they're living in 1988, complete with all the references to hair metal bands, religious fundamentalists against rock music, mullets, MTV, cults, etc. Unlike some others here, I really enjoyed the 80s-ness of this, Garton's followup to his breakthrough third novel Live Girls. I don't care how "dated" this book supposedly is, I think it's first-rate pulp horror. ![]()
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