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Бог Лезвий

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Бекки и Монтгомери Джоунсы пытаются выстроить жизнь заново, после того как на Бекки было совершено жестокое нападение. Теперь ее преследуют жуткие видения смерти, и она уверена, что напавший на нее преступник снова придет за ней, хотя он повесился в камере после ареста. Муж, уверенный, что это всего лишь посттравматические галлюцинации, решает увезти жену из города.

Он еще не знает, что они едут навстречу настоящему кошмару, что зловещие предзнаменования, преследующие Бекки, – не просто фантазии измученного разума, а преступники, с которыми предстоит встретиться этой семье, одержимы Богом Лезвий, древним чудовищем, которое с незапамятных времен требует жертв и крови от своей паствы.

448 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2007

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Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews
Profile Image for Paul Nelson.
681 reviews163 followers
July 13, 2015
The God of the Razor is a collection of short stories by Joe Lansdale published by Subterranean press, bringing together all but one of his tales about the demonic entity from another dimension, the God of the Razor.
 
The first story is the chilling centrepiece and the one that started it all, Nightrunners is without doubt a classic in the horror genre and if you're into horror then you need to read this. Joe Lansdale is an audacious storyteller and this is by far the darkest of his stories that I've read, and in retrospect it's also by far the best.
 
We start with violence as a police officer pulls over a group of kids speeding in a black '66 Chevy, they're heading toward a particularly evil revenge mission and nothing will get in their way, not even the law.
 
Montgomery and Becky Jones are staying at a house by the lake outside Minnanette, a seemingly futile attempt at getting past the harrowing rape ordeal that Becky recently suffered at the hands of a young gang of killers. Clyde Edson was the rapist caught at the scene of the crime, who later hung himself in prison but his part in this story isn't over by a long shot courtesy of the God of the Razor. The black '66 Chevy is full of Clyde's gang, armed and just a little fucking dangerous, and they know where Becky Jones and her husband are holed up. And they are going for revenge.
 
 
So the story starts somewhere near the end and we then go back in time for an intimate look at all the characters, their stories and how everyone ended up in their current predicaments. Switching from past to present as the story progresses through brutality to outright atrocity and sheer brutality. A tale of violence, fatalities a plenty, and something else, something not of this world. Something that comes in nightmares, when the night is pitch black, and bleeds back into reality with devastating consequences.
 

 
Of the other six short stories King of Shadows was my favourite, a dark story about a young boy who goes to live with another family after his Father kills his Mother then slits his own throat with a razor. Death and sharp implements follow this boy, along with someone who wears the heads of his victims like shoes.
 
Unfortunately this collection is only available if you get the book and it is certainly well worth obtaining along with the fabulous artwork inside. You can however get Nightrunners on kindle and it gets my highest recommendation.
 

Also posted at http://paulnelson.booklikes.com/post/...
Profile Image for Craig.
6,456 reviews181 followers
September 20, 2020
This volume includes the novel The Nightrunners and a half-dozen short stories that are more-or-less related to it. It doesn't include the Batman story Lansdale wrote that features the titular character and omits the Dean Koontz introduction that accompanied the novel's paperback edition. I read the novel a couple of years ago and thought it was fine, if a bit more dark and violent than my usual fare. God of the Razor is a nice mean little haunted house story, Not from Detroit is a nice mean little haunted car story, and Janet Finds the Razor is a very short little moody piece that seems too rushed. (Janet is fifteen on one page and sixteen on the next?) The Shaggy House is a very good story that would have been at home in a 1950s science fiction magazine, but doesn't seem to relate much to the book's theme. The two best stories are Incident On and Off a Mountain Road, which is a terrifically tense and creepy slasher-story with a great surprise twist at the end (it would have made a really great 1980s-era horror film!), and King of Shadows, which is one of the most chilling horror tales from a kid's viewpoint I've ever read. Chills and thrills from a master!
Profile Image for Tony Vacation.
423 reviews345 followers
March 26, 2018
A very nice artifact from Subterranean Press. Along with The Nightrunners and six short stories that are more or less related to the novel and its entity, The God of the Razor, this book also contains illustrations by Glen Chadbourne throughout, whose grotesque style of detailed messiness works well with Lansdale's grungy apprentice novel. Though some think The Nightrunners is one of the best horror novels of the 1980's and beyond, what the reader will discover is a mean-spirited, but formulaic, slasher novel that is held together with unorthodox storytelling, ultraviolence and one scene of cosmic horror. Even though there is a lot of energy on display here, the novel still doesn't really work, drawing attention to its weaknesses, such as thin plotting, two-dimensional characters and under-developed ideas. This isn't to say I disliked The Nightrunners, but it is only sleazy trash, and not even the best sleazy trash of the 1980's. "The Shaggy House" and "Incident On and Off a Mountain Road" are the two short stories I liked best, but the latter has next to nothing to do with the novel, and even Lansdale, in the story's introduction, admits to that. Speaking of those introductions, a very grumpy Lansdale can be found in each, as he continually gripes about how the Nightrunners has not yet been made into a movie that will spawn a franchise and make him the millions he feels he deserves.
Profile Image for Vicente Ribes.
916 reviews170 followers
February 6, 2025
Un libro de terror con un sabor muy 80's y una historia con fragmentos escalofriantes. Me ha recordado al mejor Stephen King de esa época.
El libro gira en torno a la figura terrorífica del Dios de la navaja. Un ser que incita a los humanos a trabajar para él cometiendo asesinatos. El libro contiene una novela y varios relatos relacionados con este personaje.
La novela " Los corredores nocturnos" es muy buena y tiene un argumento digno de llevarse a la pantalla. Un grupo de jóvenes maleantes se decican a hacer trastadas hasta que encuentran una casa y lo que allí se esconde cambiará a su líder volviéndolo totalmente loco. A partir de allí sus fechorías irán en aumento y la justicia les pisará los talones mientras ellos cometen barrabasadas influenciados por el dios de la navaja.
La novela tiene momentos muy cafres a lo Jack Ketchum y no puedes parar de leerla.
En cuanto a los relatos también están muy bien y nos muestran que Landsdale domina el género. Un libro muy recomendable para pasar un buen mal rato x)
Profile Image for Felix Zilich.
475 reviews62 followers
September 6, 2019
В 1982 году начинающий литератор Джо Лансдейл написал страшный роман «Nightrunners», который пять лет не мог пристроить ни в одно профильное издательство. Потом все же пристроил, его напечатали, а фанаты автора даже нарекли его «самой криповой книгой современности». Нарекли и на долгие годы про него забыли. Роман - честно скажем - так себе, ничего особо уникального. Из тех пожелтевших пейпербеков, которые ты находишь у себя на пыльной полке, долго листаешь, а потом с ностальгией говоришь внуку: когда я был маленький - ох прикольная книжка была, до мурашек, сейчас так уже не пишут.

Любопытным жанровым артефактом делает «Nightrunners» вовсе не текст и не сюжет, а выросшая вокруг книги мифология. Молодой Лансдейл писал простенько, но парнем был явно впечатлительным, поэтому каждую сценку в книге пропускал через собственное писательское нутро. Образы и персонажи «Nightrunners» годами продолжали жить в его голове, из-за чего он их регулярно цеплял и вписывал по второму разу в новые рассказы и сценарии. Даже в комиксы про Бэтмена и питчинги для мультфильмов. Самым любимым персонажем был для Лансдейла Бог Лезвий. Существо из параллельного мира с иглами вместо зубов, лезвиями на шляпе и отрубленными головами вместо тапочек. Бог Лезвий приходил во сне к трудным подросткам, склонным к насилию, после чего подкидывал им свою опасную бритву и терпеливо ждал, когда они впервые прольют кровь.

В 2007 году Subterranean Press предложили Лансдейлу собрать все новеллы, связанные с Богом Лезвий, и издать их под одной обложкой с «Nightrunners» и собственными комментариями. Именно этот увлеченный голос рассказчика-комментатора и вытягивает получившийся сборник. Надо признать, что, несмотря на всю стилистическую простоту, рассказы Лансдейла, будто самые ядовитые детские страшилки, крепко вьедаются в память. Чего стоит рассказ про луноликого убийцу, который, коллекционируя трупы своих жертв, оставлял в их головах большие дыры. Чтобы можно было сквозь череп смотреть на луну и звезды. Или история про хищный дом. Два старика сидят ночью на скамейке и вдруг видят как соседский дом, старый готический особняк, внезапно поворачивает голову, встряхивается, тихо-тихо крадется по улице, а потом останавливается и начинает грызть шифер на крыше их собственной халупы. Милота.
Profile Image for Aleshanee.
1,729 reviews124 followers
February 27, 2023
Die erste und längste Geschichte mit 265 Seiten, Nightrunners, hat mir sehr gut gefallen! Der Autor kann hervorragend Szenen heraufbeschwören und sie so bildhaft wiedergeben, auch wenn es nur Momentaufnahmen sind, dass man sich direkt dabei fühlt.

Wir begleiten hier das Pärchen Monty und Becky in ein einsam gelegenes Blockhaus im Wald, denn die beiden möchten unbedingt wieder zusammenfinden. Becky hat einen schlimmen und brutalen Überfall hinter sich - und während sie auf das Verständnis von Monty hofft, kämpft sie mit ihren eigenen Dämonen, die in Gestalt von grausigen Träumen und Visionen über sie herfallen.
Beide taten mir echt leid. Becky aufgrund ihrer Erfahrung, die sie machen musste; aber auch Monty, der schon seit seiner Kindheit in der Rolle des Feiglings gefangen ist und seither von Schuldgefühlen geplagt, tut sich sehr schwer, mit der Situation umzugehen. Doch beide wissen nicht, dass ihnen noch schlimmeres bevorsteht!

Dann lernen wir einige Jugendliche kennen, die alle auf einem geistigen Level krank sind, dass man ihnen wirklich unter keinen Umständen begegnen möchte. Hier kommt auch "der Gott der Klinge" ins Spiel, der seinem Namen alle Ehre macht.

Es geht teilweise ganz schön zur Sache und Joe Lansdale nimmt kein Blatt vor den Mund. Manches wird sehr detailliert geschrieben - und wie oben schon gesagt, auch auf nur wenigen Seiten fühlt man extrem mit und es gab Momente, da wollte ich einfach nur schnell weiterlesen, weil es echt schwer zu ertragen war, was da passiert.

Neben diesen Protagonisten lernt man aber auch einige Nebenfiguren kennen, die alle in das Fiasko involviert werden -auf unterschiedlichste Art und Weise. Ich mag dieses hin- und herspringen zwischen den Szenen oft sehr gerne, weil man einen Überblick bekommt und die Spannung natürlich hoch getrieben wird. Man weiß, auf was es rauslaufen wird, und verfolgt mit klopfendem Herzen die ganzen Stationen zwischendurch, die es wirklich in sich haben.

Am Ende gibts einen großen und sehr brutalen Showdown, der die Geschichte perfekt abgerundet hat.

4.5 Sterne dafür!


Außerdem gibt es noch einige Kurzgeschichten, die alle mit dem "Gott der Klinge" irgendwie in Zusammenhang stehen. Hierzu hat der Autor zu jeder von ihnen ein paar einleitende Worte geschrieben, was ich sehr interessant fand. So ein kleiner Blick hinter die Kulissen :)

Der Gott der Klinge - ein Mann, der nachts ein düstere Haus durchstöbert ... das reicht schon um echten Grusel hervorzubringen. Tolle Geschichte!

Nicht aus Detroit - ein altes Ehepaar, das am liebsten gemeinsam sterben würde. Können sie dem Tod ein Schnippchen schlagen?

König der Schatten - Kinder können grausam sein: wie ein Mobbing-Opfer zum Täter wird; und nicht damit rechnet, dass auch sein Opfer sich rächen könnte

Das zottelige Haus - ein Vampirhaus treibt sein Unwesen - lebt vor allem von den beiden älteren Herren :)

Zwischenfall an einer Bergstraße - Eine Frau die sich zu wehren weiß: vor allem das Ende war gut!

Janet findet ein Rasiermesser - Ein kurzer und knackiger Abschluss


Weltenwanderer
Profile Image for NiWa.
536 reviews9 followers
May 13, 2023
"Ein schwarzer Chevy rollt durch die Nacht und hinterlässt eine Spur des Grauens. Wer immer den Nightrunners begegnet, muss mit dem Schlimmsten rechnen. Ihr Ziel ist ein einsames Ferienhaus, in dem Becky und ihr Mann über ein traumatisches Ereignis hinwegzukommen versuchen. Doch das Schlimmste steht ihnen noch bevor." (Klappentext lt. Verlag)

Da es gar so schwierig ist, den Inhalt von „Der Gott der Klinge“ grob zu umreissen, habe ich mich für den Klappentext des Verlags als Intro entschieden. Joe R. Lansdale ist der Meister des Pulps, der abstoßende Szenen des Southern Gothic, unflätigem Humor gepaart mit derber Eleganz. Bei diesem Buch zeigt er, wie er die genannten Aspekte zu einem brutalen Spektakel des Grauens vereint.

Ich hatte angenommen, dass es sich vom Aufbau her um einen herkömmlichen Roman handelt. Überraschenderweise hat sich „Der Gott der Klinge“ als Sammlung herausgestellt. Es enthält den Kurzroman „Nightrunners“ und sechs weitere Geschichten, die allesamt um das Thema vom Gott der Klinge kreisen.

Der Titel des Buchs und das Thema an sich sind schwierig zu erklären, wenn man die Theorie des Gottes der Klinge nicht kennt. Allgemein betrachtet geht es um den Ursprung des Bösen, verzweifelten Wahnsinn und konsequente Blutrünstigkeit.

„Nightrunners“ handelt von einem Chevy, der mit seinen boshaften Insassen auf das Ferienhaus von Becky und Monty zusteuert. Auf den ersten Seiten war ich etwas enttäuscht, weil ich befürchtete, dass es sich um eine grobe Slasher-Story handelt, in welcher nur das Abschlachten der Figuren im Vordergrund steht.

Blutig und brutal ist die Geschichte auf jeden Fall. Dennoch reicht sie in die Tiefe und ist feinsinnig ersponnen und erzählt, was im Kontrast zum heftigen Hergang steht. Es geschehen richtig schlimme Dinge. Lansdale zögert dabei nicht, ins Detail zu gehen, dennoch schwenkt er sanftmütig auf Nebenschauplätze, ersinnt beeindruckende Feinheiten und rüttelt am Gemüt, sodass ein teilweise abartiger Sog entsteht. Mittendrin erhält man Einblick in ein abgedrehtes Tagebuch, welches mir stellenweise zu viel geworden ist. Bizarr, verstörend und brutal, eröffnet Lansdale den Blick in einen Wahnsinn, der einem das Blut in den Adern gefrieren lässt.

Gleichzeitig trifft man starke Figuren, erlebt trotz der Brutalität erheiternde Szenen sowie verspielte romantische Momente und genießt Lansdales erzählerisches Talent, welches im gesamten Roman meisterhaft zur Geltung kommt.

Denn auch die anderen Geschichten sind bewegend, rühren das Entsetzen auf und schütteln die Seele durch. Trotzdem erreicht „Der Gott der Klinge“ den Gipfel der Brutalität, während die weiteren Erzählungen vergleichsweise eher entspannend zu lesen sind.

Besonders gut hat mir „Nicht aus Detroit“, gefallen, weil der Autor hier eine überaus romantische Ader zeigt. In „Das zottelige Haus“ hat mich Lansdale mit seinem amüsanten Erzählstil und einer witzigen Idee überzeugt.

Ich fand die Sammlung „Der Gott der Klinge“ extrem gut und in hohem Maße brutal. Vom Erzählstil her bietet Joe R. Lansdale ein breites Repertoire, das mich an die Seiten gefesselt hat. Es ist blutig, grausam, meisterhaft eingefädelt und raffiniert erzählt. Aber es ist keinesfalls für jeden Leser geeignet!
Profile Image for Jesse.
29 reviews6 followers
October 7, 2011
Reading this book, I could not help but think: HOLYFUCKINGSHIT. The Nightrunners, God of the Razor's centerpiece, is a brutal, disturbing, and alarming piece of pop fiction, and a deserved classic. I cannot remember being so bothered by a horror novel in all my days. It burrowed into my guts and made jelly of them. I stumbled out of this book the way I would a not-fatal-but-still-pretty-messy car wreck: dazed and frightened. This is what they mean when they say splatterpunk, but it's also so much more. Don't ask me what, though. I'm still busy trying to get a good night's sleep to be bothered with those kinds of questions.
It should also be noted that God of the Razor contains some short stories too. They're not half-bad. I particularly enjoyed The Shaggy House, about a, uhm, a vampire house. It's better than it sounds! Unless, like me, you think that sounds pretty damn wonderful already. But The Nightrunners is where this book shines, and I don't think I'll get over it for a while. A towering testament to the power of genre fiction.
Profile Image for Natajia.
307 reviews8 followers
September 15, 2025
Very dark. I love it.
And the images! Creepiest ive ever seen.
Profile Image for DJMikeG.
504 reviews30 followers
April 18, 2011
The center piece of this collection is Joe Lansdale's early novel, "The Nightrunners". Its an absolutely chilling, excellent novel, and had it been published when it was written, in the early 1980s, it would have really blown people away. Its an intensely dark, grim, scary book, much meaner and nastier than anything else I've read by Lansdale. Most of his books contain some shocking moments and imagery, but this book wades neck high through the darkest subjects imaginable. While not the best thing I've read by Lansdale, this book still works, especially when you consider that it is one of the first books he ever wrote. Highly impressive work. The other short stories vary in quality, with "King of the Shadows" being my favorite. Lansdale is a fantastic author, and his fans that want to check out his horror stuff will love this book.
Profile Image for Dana *.
1,033 reviews19 followers
May 3, 2010
Set of related short stories, longest story Nightrunners is about 1/2 of the book.

The theme of the stories is definitely carried through in all but one story, Not From Detroit, which was one of my favorites.

These are brutal stories, unrelenting madness and no hope.
Profile Image for Morgan.
19 reviews26 followers
August 21, 2013
Scariest book I've ever read. I'm torn between giving this a high and low rating because this book contains some of scariest shite I've ever read and I'm pretty sure I'm going to have nightmares for a while but it is also a really good piece of fiction despite all of the scary violence.
Profile Image for Chris.
3 reviews1 follower
February 8, 2016
The Nightrunners - *****
God of the Razor - ****
Not from Detroit - ****
King of Shadows - *****
The Shaggy House - *****
Incident On and Off a Mountain Road - ****1/2
Janet Finds the Razor - ***1/2

Fantastic short story collection anchored by the classic The Nightrunners.
Profile Image for Donald.
1,739 reviews16 followers
September 15, 2019
"The Nightrunners", the book/novella is a creepy-as-hell story to finish on a Friday the 13th evening with a full moon a shining, as I just did! The God of the Razor, with his zipper head storage container, is one horrible bad guy! As is Clyde/Brian! Gruesome artwork in here too! Just a good, scary horror story! If I see a black '66 Chevy anytime soon, I'll probably shit myself...

"The God of the Razor" short story is creepy-as-hell too, as Lansdale returns us to the old, ugly Gothic house from the first story, you know, the one with the flooded basement? "Not From Detroit" is basically a love story, believe it or not. A sweet tale of how far a husband will go for his wife, set in a horror-type atmosphere.
All of these stories have the "God" either in them, or inspired by them. He is one awful, creepy creation, what with razors for teeth and decapitated heads for shoes. But he's an excellent entry into the horror Hall of Fame, right along Freddy, Jason, and Michael Myers, and it sure would be cool to see him on the silver screen! Just as long as I don't see him anywhere else!!!
Profile Image for Edward Stafford.
111 reviews6 followers
November 14, 2021
Vintage Lansdale in a really nice package (as usual) from Subterranean Press. While definitely not my favorite Lansdale novel -- that would be either Edge of Dark Water or The Thicket -- it's still good and really interesting to read now as a comparison to his newer stuff. I imagine at the time, The Nightrunners was a super freaky-deaky horror read. While it hasn't aged badly, it does show its age a bit. Like any other 80s artifact, it's easy to pick out stuff that youngsters would doubtlessly label "problematic." But for my money, Lansdale handles this stuff better than most writers of the era. Three stars for the material, one star for the exquisite Subterranean treatment, and a passing thought that I sure do like Lansdale's newer stuff better than what he was writing decades ago. And that's as it should be.
Profile Image for Bryce Wilson.
Author 10 books215 followers
October 31, 2020
Nightrunners is a 3, the rest of the collection is a 5, I'm splitting the difference. Nightrunners is almost prototypical in its "early story from an author who would figure out how to do a lot of this shit better later," nature. But the rest of the God stories are among Lansdale's best and that ain't hay.
Profile Image for Shane Kegler.
34 reviews6 followers
November 16, 2020
Great compilation if you're into something dark. Nightrunners is the longest and most compelling story in the collection. Kept thinking I knew where the story was going but the twists and shocks kept coming. Had me on the edge of my seat and my heart racing.
Profile Image for Daniel DeLappe.
677 reviews6 followers
October 30, 2018
Christ Mr Lansdale is a fantastic writer. Great characters. Perfectly paced and a lot of fun
Profile Image for Kevin.
545 reviews10 followers
February 4, 2020
Janet Finds The Razor
Very short story that begs for a sequel.
Profile Image for H.G. Gravy.
Author 9 books5 followers
November 14, 2016
The God of the Razor is a collection of stories featuring or inspired by The God of the Razor from "The Nightrunners", the featured story of the collection.

Lansdale paints one of the grimmest, grittiest, and nihilistic tales of supernatural horror I've read. It's comparable to the work of Jack Ketchum in its brutality and style. It doesn't hold back. It doesn't leave anything to the imagination. "The Nightrunners" delivers a devastating punch with each turn of the page.

The other short stories in the book touch upon the God of the Razor mythos but do not directly relate the main story. My favorite of the shorter stories were "Not From Detroit" and "Incident On and Off A Mountain Road". "Not From Detroit" was stylistically different from the other stories as it's tone wasn't as dark or horrifying. It was a tale of a man who chases after Death takes his wife from him in the middle of the night. There is far more to the story but it was a touching tale sandwiched between all other stories more in line with Nightrunners.

Profile Image for John.
445 reviews42 followers
February 20, 2008
Lansdale is usually much better than this. Every male character is an oversexed monster waiting to happen, but the end battle of the NIGHTRUNNERS saves some of the more cringe-inducing prose that leads up to it. He does dispatch with characters exceptionally well.

Includes the iconic short story "INCIDENT ON AND OFF A MOUNTAIN ROAD."
Profile Image for Jon.
206 reviews12 followers
December 14, 2014
A horrible, jarring novel of violence and terror. This is the most disturbing Lansdale book I've read to date, and possibly the most graphic book I've ever read. It gives American Psycho a run for its money. I can see why it was so difficult to find a publisher for it 30 years ago.
Profile Image for Jon.
42 reviews2 followers
February 5, 2016
This book would be well-titled as "Trigger Warning". A bit of the old ultra-violence, but some good and interesting stories.
18 reviews2 followers
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July 6, 2016
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