Mister B. Gone
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
“Think of a darker, more aggressive version of C.S. Lewis’ The Screwtape Letters. . . . Filled with wicked mischief and dark dares.” — Kansas City Star
From Clive Barker, the great master of horror and the macabre, comes a brilliant and truly unsettling tour de force of the supernatural—a terrifying work that escorts the reader on an intimate and revelatory journey to uncover the shocking truth of the battle between Good and Evil.
“Burn this book!”
So warns Jakerbok, the spellbinding narrator of this fabulously original “memoir,” a tale of good and evil deliberately “lost” for nearly six hundred years. Jakerbok is no ordinary soul; he is a minion of hell with a terrifying plan to cast the world into darkness and despair—a plan thwarted by a young apprentice of Johannes Gutenberg who buried the one and only copy of this damnable manuscript that his master printed in 1438.
Compelling and direct, Jakerbok shares the secrets of his life, going back centuries to recall the events that shaped his childhood, including the traumas he suffered at the hands of his parents, super demons themselves. He explains how he rose from “minor” to “major” demon status, and gleefully reveals his nefarious plot to “invade” the minds and hearts of unwitting humans everywhere thanks to the ingenious Gutenberg and his invention. “Burn this book!” he advises throughout—a taunt, a warning, and a command that will actually unleash the evil with which he has hidden in every word and every page, infusing the very ink and paper upon which they are printed.
Inventive and irresistible, Mister B. Good reaffirms Clive Barker is one of our most brilliant and original voices, an artist with a keen insight into mysteries deep within the human heart.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This offbeat novel in the form of a minor demon's diary may satisfy devoted Barker fans eager for his return to adult fiction after several years writing the Abarat series, but others, especially first-time readers, are likely to find this fable about good and evil less than rewarding. Jakabok Botch, the child of two demons who has inherited his father's two tails, is rendered even more grotesque after he tumbles into a fire and most of his face is badly burned. A violent dispute with his abusive father, Pappy Gatmuss, leads to the pair being trapped by a net from our world. Jakabok manages to elude capture and eventually finds his way to the home of Johannes Gutenberg, whose wife turns out to be an angel in disguise. The book's format simultaneously Botch's first-person narrative and his break-the-fourth-wall address to the reader pleading for him or her to burn the book may puzzle readers unused to Barker's quirks.
Customer Reviews
The Autobiography of a Demon
Disappointed that iTunes doesn't have Clive Barker's best books available for download yet. The Books of Blood, In the Flesh, The Inhuman Condition, and Cabal are absolute classics. He kind of lost me as a reader when he went more towards fantasy stories. With the exception of a few like Coldheart Canyon, they just didn't do it for me. With this story, he shows he still has the ability to go to that dark place I grew to love with his early works. Only reason I didn't give it 5 stars is I felt it was kind of short for $11.95, but a great read nonetheless.
Amazing work
I really loved this book, I bought 2, one is to keep and the other to burn, if you haven’t read the book you are not gonna understand 😉
Phoned this one in.
Not really worth the time to read. Found myself skipping over whole sections to get back to the storyline. Was disappointed at the end. If you're looking for a good Clive barker book, skip this one.