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But there are hints of other problems as well. Why has the starring actress been lied to about the nature of the movie? Why is there a human arm in a box in the producer's room? Why does one of the actresses succumb to a horrible though apparently accidental death shortly after finishing her part? The tension builds as we move toward the conclusion and we know that something really bad is going to happen. But exactly what, I'm not going to tell you. You'll have to buy a copy of the book to find out. Real good stuff and a fascinating look at the exploitation film industry as well. The prose is so smooth that you'll hardly be aware of it. It's a book that will leave you twitching uncomfortably when you finish. -- Don D'Ammassa Horror Reviews / http://www.dondammassa.com/r3.htm
An authentically seedy, almost charming tale of zero-budget horror moviemaking morphs cleverly into a genuine splatterfest in Williams's unnervingly enjoyable debut. With just one week and almost no money, director Sheldon Meyer and producer Gene Hoffman hope to make the ultimate underground horror film on location in south Florida, but star Vance Cogburn is drinking, local lawman Sonny Platt is making trouble, and Meyer hasn't told novice ingenue Barbara Cheston his real plans. Readers familiar with Sam Raimi's Evil Dead films or Bruce Campbell's memoir If Chins Could Kill will find Williams's descriptions of less-than-a-shoestring movie production wholly convincing, escalating crises and all. The gratuitous gore--filmed and real--delivers solidly on the horror end, and a sly framing device adds a slightly ambiguous layer of additional authenticity. Those looking for a pure bloodbath may find the book too literate, but horror film buffs should be delighted and chilled in equal measure. -- Publishers Weekly
Fans of urban legends, splatter cinema, and sharp tools will want to get it on with CRIMSON ORGY. Austin Williams' debut novel pays respect to the cinematic trail blazed by H.G. Lewis--with sex, storms, and suspense -- Rod Lott, Bookgasm.com
First-time novelists are told to write what they know and it so happens that a talented tyro named Austin Williams is an expert on 1960s gore films, from the anything-for-a-buck producers and $50-a-day-plus-car-fare actors to the sleazy storylines and gruesome special effects. CRIMSON ORGY is the rare book that you seem to be watching rather than reading, because it's so visual that it will remind you of those bloody horror films that played at the drive-in forty years ago, only with more intelligence and intentional humor. I'd like to think that if Williams had written his book back them, Vincent Price would have optioned it to be a starring vehicle and given the movie a modest budget and some style -- Danny Peary, author of Cult Movies and Guide for the Film Fanatic
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