Christopher Rowley
Author of Bazil Broketail
About the Author
Christopher Rowley is a journalist and reporter for a local newspaper in the Catskills region of New York. He is the author of twenty-three science fiction and fantasy novels.
Image credit: Christopher Rowley
Series
Works by Christopher Rowley
Aftermath: Population Zero 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Rowley, Christopher B.
- Birthdate
- 1948
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Lynn, Massachusetts, USA
- Places of residence
- England, UK
New York, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
In the beginning God created the prose novel and He saw that it was good. The prose novel was lonely though and so God put it to sleep, tore out a page, and created the comic. The prose novel and comic lived together happily in the library of Eden and bore fruit that they named 'Graphic Novel'. Thousands of years later and a bastard hybrid of the graphic novel and the prose novel has somehow been born and it was not a day too soon.
'The Bloodstained Man', as you may have guessed, is a midway show more meeting point between a prose and graphic novel. Almost every page has a picture that ranges from about an eighth of the page space to about a quarter. Some pages have a couple of drawings. However, the pictures are the side salad whereas the prose is the meat and potatoes of this literary dinner. That dinner was easily digested and it tasted good with the cover and inside artwork making it pleasant on the eyes also.
From the back cover of the book...
"...Detective Rook Venner, Mistress Julia, and Plesur are on the run from the government troops trying to kill them and from a shadowy group that wants to capture Plesur alive for its own purposes. What secrets have been planted in Plesur's head - and why are they worth killing for?
Caught between these two powerful rivals, the trio hides out in the lawless New Jersey territory. Betrayed by gang members looking to collect the bounty on Plesur's head, the three are separated, and Rook and Mistress Julia find themselves in mortal danger. Julia, given as a prize to a gang member, finds herself in chains, but not without her own means of fighting back. Rook, forced to fight for his life in the gang's bloodthirsty gladiatorial games, must stay alive long enough to rescue Plesur, but time is running out."
I have to admit that I couldn't get into this book when I first picked it up and sat myself down. Something just wasn't right. You see, the day was warm and sunny with the smell of freshly cut grass in the air. Children were playing outside, laughing and giggling, enjoying the sunshine and the whole ambiance was just wrong for a book like this.
Out came the stereo.
In went the heavy metal CD.
Up went the volume.
Down the throat went a cold beer.
Now, this was more like it!
"Oh baby, baby
How was I supposed to know
That something wasn't right here
Oh baby baby..."
WHOA!!!! HOLD ON!!!!! WRONG FRICKIN' CD!!!!
With the setting turned from a wrong to a right I tried again to read the book and, in the correct state of mind, thoroughly enjoyed it. Think of this novel as the equivalent of an action packed, exploitation movie with more explosions and guns than an episode of the A-Team and as much sex and nudity as a bachelor party at the Playboy mansion. Make no mistake about it 'The Bloodstained Man' doesn't pretend to be anything other than an all action, in your face, kickin' your teeth out, high octane, roller coaster ride of sex and violence. Also, make no mistake about it this book succeeds in what it wants to be and I for one found it a refreshing change from the norm and hope that it has great success. show less
'The Bloodstained Man', as you may have guessed, is a midway show more meeting point between a prose and graphic novel. Almost every page has a picture that ranges from about an eighth of the page space to about a quarter. Some pages have a couple of drawings. However, the pictures are the side salad whereas the prose is the meat and potatoes of this literary dinner. That dinner was easily digested and it tasted good with the cover and inside artwork making it pleasant on the eyes also.
From the back cover of the book...
"...Detective Rook Venner, Mistress Julia, and Plesur are on the run from the government troops trying to kill them and from a shadowy group that wants to capture Plesur alive for its own purposes. What secrets have been planted in Plesur's head - and why are they worth killing for?
Caught between these two powerful rivals, the trio hides out in the lawless New Jersey territory. Betrayed by gang members looking to collect the bounty on Plesur's head, the three are separated, and Rook and Mistress Julia find themselves in mortal danger. Julia, given as a prize to a gang member, finds herself in chains, but not without her own means of fighting back. Rook, forced to fight for his life in the gang's bloodthirsty gladiatorial games, must stay alive long enough to rescue Plesur, but time is running out."
I have to admit that I couldn't get into this book when I first picked it up and sat myself down. Something just wasn't right. You see, the day was warm and sunny with the smell of freshly cut grass in the air. Children were playing outside, laughing and giggling, enjoying the sunshine and the whole ambiance was just wrong for a book like this.
Out came the stereo.
In went the heavy metal CD.
Up went the volume.
Down the throat went a cold beer.
Now, this was more like it!
"Oh baby, baby
How was I supposed to know
That something wasn't right here
Oh baby baby..."
WHOA!!!! HOLD ON!!!!! WRONG FRICKIN' CD!!!!
With the setting turned from a wrong to a right I tried again to read the book and, in the correct state of mind, thoroughly enjoyed it. Think of this novel as the equivalent of an action packed, exploitation movie with more explosions and guns than an episode of the A-Team and as much sex and nudity as a bachelor party at the Playboy mansion. Make no mistake about it 'The Bloodstained Man' doesn't pretend to be anything other than an all action, in your face, kickin' your teeth out, high octane, roller coaster ride of sex and violence. Also, make no mistake about it this book succeeds in what it wants to be and I for one found it a refreshing change from the norm and hope that it has great success. show less
I like Rowley because he makes me think. His stories are good, but there is always this dilemma that his characters face (whatever their species) that could perhaps be our own and that always makes his work transcendental on some level.
I'm unfamiliar with Heavy Metal magazine, so I had no idea what to expect from Pleasure Model. What it was is unexpected, delicious fun.
Even though it's got a bit of a cyberpunk/sci-fi setting, it reads like a noir: gritty setting, sexy and amoral heroes, a strong sense of place, lots of shades of gray. The world building was just appropriate -- enough to give the reader a sense of what life is like without bogging anyone down with unnecessary details.
This is the first book in a series and show more I'm eagerly anticipating the sequel. show less
Even though it's got a bit of a cyberpunk/sci-fi setting, it reads like a noir: gritty setting, sexy and amoral heroes, a strong sense of place, lots of shades of gray. The world building was just appropriate -- enough to give the reader a sense of what life is like without bogging anyone down with unnecessary details.
This is the first book in a series and show more I'm eagerly anticipating the sequel. show less
I read this, but I almost didn't finish it. At the start it is a strange mishmash of characters with no background, a strange world with a lot of missing backstory, and even stranger super aliens. As it turns out this is a sequel, and if you haven't read the previous book you'll be lost for a while. Its not a terrible book, and it did improve as it went on, but it really felt all along that I was missing too much to enjoy it. Way too much backstabbing, dirty politics, and out and out crime. show more In that way it reminds me of the Lensman books - but there's no good guys to save the day and round up the bad guys, just more bad guys to wipe out the little bad guys. Not recommended. show less
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 26
- Members
- 3,047
- Popularity
- #8,378
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 29
- ISBNs
- 55
- Languages
- 3
- Favorited
- 2
















