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The Bone Parade (2004)

di Mark Nykanen

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2257119,494 (3.26)10
Ashley Stassler is not your average artist. He has been wildly praised for a series of bronze sculptures that group families together, depicting them in moments of excruciating physical and emotional pain--but the art world has no clue as to how he creates such authentic, gruesome, seemingly tortured human representations. He assigns each family a number, and now he's up to number nine. What's in store for family #9? Cruelty and savagery that you can't even imagine . . . The Bone Parade introduces a villain who is as methodical, calculating, and detached as any found in the best fiction. It's gripping. It's chilling. You might be too afraid to read on, but you'll never be able to tear your eyes away.… (altro)
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This book started out great. A seriously evil villain with a unique M.O. It got bogged down a bit in the middle, and then the ending picked up and was very exciting.

The point of view skips around quite a bit in this book. We get Strasser (the villain/sculptor), Lauren (the art professor) and Kerry (art student/victim). Strasser likes to kidnap families, torture them for months, and finally kill them and immortalize them in bronze. The public think he is a gifted sculpture, but he is really a serial killer. We get inside his mind, which is full of chatter about how superior he is, and how his victims are lucky he chose them. We see Strasser abduct family #9. We never learn their real names, only the nicknames he gives them.

Family #9 is very dysfunctional. The mother truly hates the daughter, nicknamed Diamond Girl. We never learn exactly why she is hated so much, but it may be because she is a sociopath like Strasser. Diamond Girl tries to play mind games with Strasser, while he tries to manipulate her. It makes for an interesting dynamic. Diamond Girl is easily the most interesting person in the book.

The middle section, with Lauren searching for Kerry got a little tedious for me. Not much happens, just a lot of soul searching on Lauren's part. When she finally goes to confront Strasser, that is when the action picks up again.

This book was an interesting read. It was entertaining. A solid read, but not a great one. ( )
  readingover50 | Jun 11, 2019 |
This book was disturbing and yet I couldn't put it down. Not for the easily offended or for anyone who is sensitive to nightmares. The ending was unpredictable until the very last minute. I was on the edge of my seat for the last 1/3 of the book. ( )
  Jadedog13 | Feb 3, 2016 |
i came across this book in a used bookstore, and didn't expect much. i chose it because i read the prologue, which hinted at a tale about dark arts, human monsters, and the underbelly of accepted society. i expected something derivative, but the book was cheap so i went for it.

books by authors with whom you're not familiar are doubly delightful when they not only turn out to be good, but fantastic. this book indeed deals with dark arts and human monsters, and features a serial killer whose modus operandi and concomitant philosophy are horrifyingly original. his methods of madness are, arguably the most disturbing of any fictional serial killer. additionally, the book is well-written, and involves a sub-story involving a relationship between the killer and one of his victims -- bringing the disturbo factor to an even more fevered pitch.

i'm loathe to talk too much about the plot, as i'm very sensitive to spoilers. but, if you like well-written horror books involving super-sadistic killers, the psychology between victim and killer, believable characters you can sympathize with or despise, and a taut, suspenseful yarn, give this a try.

this work gets a solid and unusual 5 stars from me. i'm jonesing for more Nykanen. ( )
1 vota mel-L-co0l-j | May 9, 2010 |
Premise: a famous artist creates bronze statues by taking molds of people he's kidnapped and tortured as they're dying.

One would think this'd be right up my alley. Only it's not. So not. The writing was technically good. The characters were pretty two-dimensional, especially the women, and most especially Diamond Girl, who is obviously supposed to be some sort of intriguing psychopath in the making or suffer from Stockholm syndrome or something. As for Stassler, the artist, not only is he dispicable--he's a serial killer and they are (though very good authors can make you somehow find something sympathetic in a sick way about them), but there's nothing in the least intriguing about him. He's an arrogant bastard and it's impossible to believe that in his arrogance he hasn't actually slipped up.

Even seemingly random events (Lauren finding the Rottweiler Leroy for instance) are very obvious as plot devices as soon as they happen. And of course, the climax of the story is set during a violent thunderstorm. Torture, indeed. ( )
1 vota PirateJenny | Mar 6, 2008 |
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To my mother, Veronica Coyne Nykamen,
who told us many dark and funny stories
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Ba-WAAAAH-WAAH-WAH. The trumpets were huge, impossibly long, and their sound carried down the mountains and across the valley and shook my belly till it felt as hollow as the thin air itself.
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Ashley Stassler is not your average artist. He has been wildly praised for a series of bronze sculptures that group families together, depicting them in moments of excruciating physical and emotional pain--but the art world has no clue as to how he creates such authentic, gruesome, seemingly tortured human representations. He assigns each family a number, and now he's up to number nine. What's in store for family #9? Cruelty and savagery that you can't even imagine . . . The Bone Parade introduces a villain who is as methodical, calculating, and detached as any found in the best fiction. It's gripping. It's chilling. You might be too afraid to read on, but you'll never be able to tear your eyes away.

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