Let's All Kill Constance
SEARCH IN  
Click here to buy posters
In Association with Amazon.com
 
ORDER BOOK
 BUY THE BOOK
  
 

Last summer I said that if Ray Bradbury wrote a collection of grocery lists that I’d be first in line to read it. Well, I mis-spoke myself. Let’s All Kill Constance is perfect proof that even the best of authors can write a dud.

Set in the early 1960s, the premise is that an aging star shows up on a writer’s door step in a raging rainstorm desperately afraid she’s about to die. Two phone books with names crossed out in red ink have been delivered to her and her name has been circled in both. She promptly disappears and the writer, along with his closest friends, begins a manic search for her. The chase leads through the forgotten neighborhoods and sewers of southern Los Angeles. Along the way the reader gets a tour of Hollywood before color films claimed the big screen.

The plot is full of staggering holes and none of the characters ever really hit their stride. The attempts at plugging humor into the story all fall flat. On the up side, the chapters are really short.

Normally, Bradbury is one of the best writers working today. This book just doesn’t live up to the high standard that the rest of his work has created for him. I’d recommend you skip this book and get your Bradbury fix with Something Wicked This Way Cometh.



Submissions Contributors Advertise About Us Contact Us Disclaimer Privacy Links Awards Request Review Contributor Login
© Copyright 2002 - 2024 NightsAndWeekends.com. All rights reserved.