Jim Nisbet discusses "The Price of the Ticket"
Series: Poets of the Tabloid Murder
From: Steven Nester
Length: 00:31:07
Also in the Poets of the Tabloid Murder series
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(00:29:17)
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(00:29:45)
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William Dietrich discusses "The Barbary Pirates"
(00:30:54)
From: Steven Nester
William Dietrich is a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, an
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(00:28:30)
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Piece Description
From Publishers Weekly
In this bleak noir novel set in San Francisco, Nisbet (Prelude to a Scream) etches the lives of two wretched misfits in acid prose. At 50-plus years of age, Mark "Pauley" Paulos has survived the horrifically abusive childhood trauma that forms the book's unforgettable prologue, along with untracked periods of jail and other misadventures, to achieve a kind of precarious stasis. Martin Seam, on the other hand, has little idea of who or what he is. Full of wants and needs and thoroughly amoral, he is willing to steal, cheat, scam or do anything merely to quiet those incessant desires. Unfortunately, Martin is as unsuccessful as he is unscrupulous. When these two collide in their separate orbits about the universe, it seems like a cosmic joke. If Elmore Leonard had created Pauley and Martin they would shine with a fine comic sheen. In Nisbet's hands they scratch, prickle, sweat and stink. Nisbet can overwrite ("Like the lysergic pinwheel from which depointillates all phenomenology, Mark Paulos' entire juvenile world devolved upon that nail and its strop"), but he also presents with wrenching effectiveness the fragile accommodations his characters have to make in order to survive in a hostile world they can never overcome and can keep at bay only for a time.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.