Miss Finney can grow younger.All it takes is a murder now and then, thanks to the strange little man that her nieces introduce into her life. And thanks to the dark powers he represents... But Miss Finney tries to forget about that part. And so do the nieces.It's a good thing that Miss Finney's rich, and her lovely nieces poor—a good thing for Miss Finney. For Miss Finney is crippled, and they have to do the killings in her name.And they do. But something horrible is going to happen to them. And to Miss Finney.And possibly to you....
There’s only one anti-aging plan that’s never been tried before, and I think it’s bound to work. It can’t be any harder than collecting bee semen for a facial, and you can read all about it in Al Dempsey’s Miss Finney Kills Now and Then which reads like a John Waters movie about serial killers and is written in the high-drama shriek of your favorite drag queen. If reading the campiest book ever about killer old ladies is on your bucket list, this is the book for you! Read more, if you dare!
We killed them. No we didn’t kill anyone. We totally killed them. Just kidding we pretend killed them. No they’re super dead and I’m young now. The end.
Crazy old hag enlists her two nieces to kill to make her young again. This was a very fun, campy novel. A bit over the top. The ending was a little bit of a cop out, but the trip there was great. The story takes place in the Finney ancestral home in Louisiana. A wealthy woman who does not want to die. She goes to a clairvoyant type and is told that who ever she kills, she gets the rest of there life.
This is the kind of book you could read over and over again. One of the better horror books I've read from the early 80's.
This started out as a discombobulated tale between wealthy 'ol aunt Finney and her two nieces, in her old mansion in New Orleans. You get through that early part of the story, and this becomes a pretty good little supernatural tale. Being a 30 year old novel, this would have made a fun movie back in the 80's also. 3.5 stars.
Con una historia sencilla, el escritor construye una novela de terror efectiva hasta su final empleando algunas vueltas de tuerca que no me esperaba. Los personajes no tienen desarrollo sino que actúan en función de la trama y sus giros. Tiene algunas descripciones impactantes no aptas para las personas más sensibles cargadas de sangre y gore. Yo lo llamo un libro "pochoclero" porque cumple la función de entretener (y no es algo menor) Ideal para la temporada Halloween.
Distinctly daffy but overall a chore to get through; reads like a thoroughly poor man's Michael McDowell or one of Curtis Harrington's high camp 'psycho matron' movies as made by Andy Milligan - while it does redeem itself a smidgen in the final act when things suddenly go all satanico pandemonium, ultimately it's a long way for a little bit.