A Story told in two parts. This is a second reprint of the 1994 horror novel by Richard Laymon. First published by Headline Features and described as thus:
High-school prankster Tony Johnson kidnapped school beauty Linda Allison and locked her in a haunted house for the night. Linda didn't see the funny side. Now Tony is in Hollywood and has forgotten all about Linda. But she certainly hasn't forgotten him.
Now it has been made available by Samhain Publishing for a release date of 17 May 2016. They describe the book as follows:
When the horror becomes real, Dani Larson is the queen of horror movie special effects. Grisly murders and mutilated corpses are all in a day’s work for her. Nothing frightens her—not even watching herself torn to pieces on the screen. But now the gore is real, and Dani is terrified. She’s being stalked by the Chill Master, a psychopath who wants to be Dani’s apprentice, her lover, and eventually…her replacement. Can Dani find a way to survive? Or will this real-life horror movie scare Dani to death?
Richard Laymon is probably the grand daddy of Extreme violence and the splatter punk movement and probably single handedly help create the extreme horror writers that we have today such as Matt Shaw and Tim Miller, to name just a couple.
Starting his writing career in 1980 until his untimely death in 2001, Laymon has written 44 novels plus one that was restored and reissued, 20 Fastbacks, 5 collections and over sixty short stories. Laymon has quite an extensive turn around of material for twenty-one year writing span. When writing at this speed, this at times creates causalities with overused plots, tired characterisations and very often tired and true plot devices that seems to be more paint by numbers than intuitive and well developed.
Laymon writes to a similar themes such as surprising (and often outlandish) plot twists, a sexually depraved villain, portrayal of the heroines as beautiful, strong, and almost Amazonian in stature (despite also being depicted as vulnerable and scantily clad throughout much of the proceedings), pendulous breast and revenge. These are all present in this book and unfortunately, not a lot of thought was brought to the fore when using these trusty themes.
The Night Show starts out promising enough with a girl being abducted by three men and taken to a quote unquote haunted house in the small upstate town in New York State. After being tied up and slapped about, Linda escapes only to be hit by a car and go into the coma.
The action then shifts to Dani, top of her game, special effects artist whose passion is working on stalk and slash horror films and her new relationship with her special effects assistant. All is going well as their relationship is so new so the sex is great and their love is explosive until Tony starts stalking and throwing himself after Dani in a sleazy manner making Dani uncomfortable. So uncomfortable, that she still tries to stay friendly with him.
The story then jumps back and forth from Linda getting revenge and Dani noticing things are not quite right with Tony. This is where the story starts to come apart at the seams unfortunately.
The book suffers from wafer thin characters and logic is apparently missing from any of the main characters. The secondary characters are pretty much non existence and plot devices are very forced.
This is basically pulp fiction at its worse but there are some glimmers of hop as this is a real page turner and if you are able to sustain belief in logics and plot devices, you should be able to finish this in one sitting.
Night Show is a fun rollercoaster ride that takes you from point A to point B but you will need to ensure you are on autopilot as it is basically an extremely bad B movie without a good editor.
This is not one of Laymon’s best. To experience Laymon at his best, try The Beast House trilogy or The Travelling Vampire Show. Laymon had some exciting books out there but unfortunately, this one is probably not the best place to start. Tired and ridiculous formula that is not very well thought out. He wrote this in his sleep.