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Paradise Burns

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Disgraced former detective, Rudy Patchiss, has reinvented himself as a private investigator specializing in missing persons. When he is asked to find college student Jennifer Acres, he travels to the mountains near the Canadian border to plumb an underground world of sex, drugs and rock 'n roll but what he finds is a deeper, more ancient evil, one that claims lives without being noticed in our modern day world. His investigation brings him to an urban nightmare of a city, a club called Paradise, and into a relationship with a tattooed bartender, Stacy, who tries to point him in the right direction. Ultimately, his work leads him deep into the mountains to a place that can truly be called "Paradise;" a place where there are no boundaries, no rules, no limits.  It is a place of ultimate freedom that can be one man's heaven and another man's hell.

226 pages, Paperback

First published March 24, 2015

343 people want to read

About the author

Marc E. Fitch

26 books41 followers
Marc E. Fitch is the author of the novels Dead Ends, Boy in the Box and Paradise Burns, among others, as well as the books Paranormal Nation: Why America Needs Ghosts, UFOs and Bigfoot and Shmexperts: How Power Politics and Ideology are Disguised as Science. His short fiction has appeared in numerous publications and anthologies, including Best Horror of the Year vol 10.

Marc received his Master of Fine Arts degree from Western Connecticut State University and has worked as a bartender, psychiatric technician for in-patient behavioral health hospitals, and most recently as an investigative reporter. He was the recipient of the 2014 Robert Novak Journalism Fellowship and the Leslie Leeds Poetry Prize. He is the father of four children and lives and works in Connecticut.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Benoit Lelièvre.
Author 6 books189 followers
January 12, 2016
This was a solid, classically told detective novel not unlike Dennis Lehane's old Patrick Kenzie/Angelo Gennaro material. Fitch is more lyrical than Lehane, there is flashes of James Lee Burke to what he does and it sometimes reminded me of video game Heavy Rain, too. Perhaps what I enjoyed best about PARADISE BURNS was how morally compromised protagonist Rudy Patchiss is. He's a white knight in a tainted armor and he carries the novel into the kind of grey zone I really enjoy reading. PARADISE BURNS is quite scorching, melodramatic at times, but it definitely is worth your time.
Profile Image for Mav Skye.
Author 34 books89 followers
April 1, 2015

If Milton were to come back today and write Paradise Lost in the spirit of Poe & King with a smidgeon of Steinbeck, then Paradise Burns is what you'd end up with. Only this isn't Poe, King, or Steinbeck. It's Marc E Fitch, knocking the snot out of mythology and horror, with possibly the freshest and most creative voice in the dark fiction today.

The story starts with a dead body and a broken but determined detective. It continues with a lost town, mysterious dark giants that gnash their teeth in the night, and ends with a horrific (heart wrenching) abomination. Any horror or crime lover would be crazy not to read this book. Easily the book of the year.
Profile Image for Angela Crawford.
387 reviews23 followers
May 18, 2015

I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. This is in no way reflected in my opinion of this novel.


The writing in Paradise Burns is dark and gritty. The descriptive passages hold a horrible and lyrical beauty that captured my imagination and wouldn't let go until I found out what happened next. The storyline captured the melancholy feeling of the dying towns and the dark places where those who are lost fall into the cracks never to be heard from again. The main character, Rudy Patchiss, is wholly sympathetic and realistically flawed. At times he wasn't very likable but you still wanted him to succeed. By the end of the book I found myself wondering who were the real monsters. The shadowy demons half-seen in the darkness, or those who prey on the damaged souls lost in the seedy underbelly of Paradise. This was my first book by Marc E. Fitch but it won't be my last!! A solid 4 star read.
Profile Image for S.T. King.
12 reviews
April 17, 2015
I wonder, reader, if you can smell the air of this place: high-rise apartment buildings and their black soot-covered windows, train-tracks pushing through tufts of thick green weeds and dense grass, broken roads of blackened asphalt covered in beer bottles and solo cups -- syringes, cigarette butts, opened foam plates with chicken-bones and red globs of ketchup, the acrid odor of dew, flies, the dense silence of morning -- and the sun rises slowly beyond the leaning rusted fences, like its afraid, reluctant to lift the darkness from the narrow and still alleyways. The night bid its leave and sink in the soil like it'd been bearing the full weight of the darkness, a blackness that hides secrets from the better parts of America: poverty, freedom, self-destruction.

I welcome you, reader, to Paradise.

There in a pale misty light from a lamp at the other end of the alley, Chapman could see the sneering face and walked to the other side of the pass. The derelict's legs were stretched out in front of him and his feet were bare, chunks having been gnawed off by rodents in the night. Chapman gave him wide berth. He'd had enough to deal with from strangers tonight already. As he passed, those strange eyes glared at him and the face was suddenly so clear it transfixed his eyes. It was laughing a hearty, meat-filled laugh.

"You want to come over on this side boy?" It said.
"No," Chapman said back to it.
"You will soon, boy. You will soon."


Excerpt from Paradise Burns, by Marc Fitch.

In order for horror to work, to reach its tendrils over a society -- if it’s to make you more wary of that drunk watching you pump gas (when, of course, you should be home, perhaps reading a book) – if it’s to make you look behind you as you walk, sticking to the faux safety of the street lights – it has to have societal context. It must let itself in at your front door. It must eat meatloaf and string-beans with you and your daughter -- and she has such a bright future, doesn't she? Such a swell ride ahead of her. And when she comes back from college she’ll be successful. She’ll settle in her dorm with her roommates, studious and artsy girls. Maybe she’ll screw a boy at a frat party. But no need to fret about that. She has good sense. And isn't life beyond high school about experimentation, anyway?

Yes, it is, isn't it?

Paradise Burns, written by Marc E. Fitch, puts the concept of evil under a microscope. Our hero (in the loosest sense or the word) is Rudy Patchiss. He’s an ex-cop turned private investigator. And on his sleeve is his own bleeding heart. He’s a hero to some; and to yet to others, little more than grime.

Rudy’s been hired to find Jennifer Acres, a college student who’s went missing. And he travels to the mountains near the Canadian border, to Parlor City. Within Parlor city is Paradise, a nightclub where she was known to perform (also in the loosest sense of the word). And he meets Stacy, a tattooed bartender.

Stacy's life was different, tragic from the beginning with no expectation of anything more than tragedy. Therefore she was left free to wander in the burned out industrial complex that has become America. The thrift store was Saks Fifth Avenue for her, the tattoos the equivalent of a well manicured lawn and the biggest, nicest house in the neighborhood. She was a ghost wandering a graveyard world, an inverted place where drugs were the ticket to reality, starving was the normal, and the city was a place of infinite dimensions.

Excerpt from Paradise Burns, by Marc Fitch.

If I told you, reader, that a work of horror and crime fiction could be existential, philosophical, even, would you humor me? Would you believe me, most gracious Reader? If I told you Fitch has crafted a tale that takes the concept of evil and breaks it two and then blurs the line between the pieces? Here lay your son, a monster under his bed, the wickedness of the unknown. And here’s a young sorority girl that sees black shadowy monsters when she blinks her eyes. And she lay on the dirty dance-floor of Paradise, as the tunes of an amateur band feed a curious energy, and she smiles – and she says words, but they don’t make any sense.

Horror lives on a continuum in Paradise Burns, between what is real and what is extraordinary, and a strong point in the read is the difficulty you’ll have making the distinction between the two. From the religious and existential overtones to Rudy’s own crippled person-hood the story is a duality, feeding off the relativity of evil. The prose is easy to follow, ebbing along with rich and gritty imagery; the mood of Paradise is sour; and it smells of cheap beer and body odor -- and the patch of tile behind the nightclub toilet. Fitch has sculpted his world with dirty clay; and from it stands fascinating gray stills that turn your stomach, yet won’t let go of your eyes.

Weaknesses, you ask? Sure -- there’s a few I suppose I could note.

Rudy, strangely enough, starts out as a fairly layered character. But as we get deeper in the thick of his struggle his complexity flat-lines. It’s most unfortunate since we spend most of the story in his head, after all, watching as his train of thought becomes more basic and hackneyed. Maybe this is a result of the read in its entirety, as it seems unsure how deep it wants (or is able) to go with its moral exploration. It’s clear to me there was a bit of a “bottom” where perhaps the inner dialog ran dry, and we had to rely on other markers in the writers world to press us on.

Second are a few notable instances where the imagery seems over-saturated: where the details or metaphors feel excessive or inappropriate or vapid. It’s a slow unfold process where the subtly of Parlor City is ultimately abandoned as Fitch allows the monsters (loosey goosey this one too) out to play from their recesses. For me, it seems to weaken the atmosphere.

Really, it’s not so bad.

For even with its flaws I’m excited to read what Fitch has next to offer. The taste that stuck to my mouth after reading Paradise Burns was sweet and satisfying; it’d rush the palate of any reader who’s into monsters that wear the face of people you might know, might have known, or might know in the future.

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Profile Image for J.J. Hensley.
Author 14 books112 followers
October 31, 2016
What a pleasant find. I didn't read any reviews or the synopsis before starting this book. The writing is excellent and it's certainly original.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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